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THE CITY OF DUMBO IS BACK WITH NEW INDUSTRIAL LINES AND MORE ELECTRICITY. THE MANUFACTURERS ARE READY TO DELIVER THE NEXT GENERATION OF TECHNOLOGY.
NEW KANSAN PRESS INSTALLED—Lowell Ross, Goss Printing company representative, (left) is shown giving instructions to workmen erecting the Kansan's new $25,000 press in the basement of the new Journalism building. The workmen are Alvin Larabee (on the press) and Albert Chandler. The press will not be used for printing the Daily Kansan until this summer, when the University Press will move into the new building. Kawsen photo by Jim Murray.
move into the new building.—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Mid-Year Graduates Find Jobs Plentiful
Mid-year graduates at KU, Kansas State college and the University of Missouri had no trouble finding employment.
The three schools said today there are many more jobs than mid-year graduates, and that applies to schools of engineering, education, business, agriculture, journalism, and even zoology.
Charles J. Baer, assistant dean of the KU School of Engineering, said, "We could have placed five times as many men as we had. Offers varied from $325 a month up to $450, and one superior man is going to get $500."
The military is going to drain off some of the men, and some of the women are getting married, the three schools reported.
In the field of education, KU reported the "best mid-year prospects in a long time," with men starting at $3,000 a year and women at $2,500 in eastern Kansas and slightly more in the western half of the state. Teachers who coach or teach music are offered a $200 to $300 premium.
The William Allen White School of Journalism said it "didn't begin to have the men or women to fill the jobs."
Missouri's School of Journalism reported "more job calls than usual," and said its 56 graduates were far too few to fill the places. One graduating senior wrote seven prospective employers and got seven acceptances.
At Kansas State, R. I. Throckmorton, dean of the School of Agriculture, said there were three or four job opportunities for each January graduate in agriculture and related fields.
K-State's engineering school produced 15 bachelor of science degrees in mechanical engineering and 51 firms offered them jobs.
Staff Positions Open For 'College Daze'
Applications are now being accepted for positions on the "College Daze" production staff by the Student Union Activities office.
The positions of publicity director, cast secretary, stage manager, vocal director and pianist are open.
Applications must be left in the SUA office or given to Dick Klassen, producer of "College Daze," by noon, Friday, Feb. 8.
Dean Margaret Justin at the Kansas State School of Home Economics said there was a sharp shortage of available graduates for home demonstration jobs, home economics teaching openings, and openings for dietitians and nurses.
Organ Recital Set For Sunday
The second in a series of recitals to be played on the baroque organ in the Museum of Art will be presented at 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 3, by Jerald Hamilton, member of the music staff at Washburn university.
Sunday's program, open to the public without charge, is sponsored by the Museum of Art and the School of Fine Arts.
The program will include three pieces from "Suite Francaise" by Jean Langlais, three German selections by Dietrich Buxtehude, Sonate I by Paul Hindemith, and Suite for the Musical Clocks by Franz Joseph Havdn.
Mr. Hamilton, organist and choirmaster of Topeka Grace cathedral, is a graduate of the University School of Fine Arts. He holds the bachelor of music and master of music degrees with a major in organ. He has done organ study with Laurel E. Anderson, professor of organ and theory, and Frank Van Dusen of the American conservatory in Chicago.
The Colorado-Kansas game Monday, Feb. 4, in Hoch auditorium will honor the sophomore class. The class will give the sophomore yell and provide half time entertainment.
Game To Honor Sophomore Class
Sections 11 and 12 and rows a through k will be reserved for the sophomores. Those who wish to sit in these sections should be in the auditorium by 7:20 p.m.
Daily Kansan
Sophomore class hats will be on sale from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and Monday in the information booth and in the auditorium lobby. The hats cost $1.
49th Year
Friday, Feb. 1, 1952
Mid-Western Music Camp Scheduled June 16-July 27
Course Changes Must Be Made Before Monday
Late enrollment and changes in schedule will be made today and tomorrow. All students enrolling late will pay a fee of $2.50. The schedule is:
No.80
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences-9 to 11 a.m., Saturday, Robinson gymnasium.
William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information—9 to 11 a.m., Saturday, Robinson gymnasium.
School of Education—8 a.m. to noon, Saturday, 103 Fraser.
School of Fine Arts-8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 126 Strong.
School of Religion-9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Robinson gymnasium.
School of Engineering-9 to 11 a.m., Saturday, Marvin hall. Students in the School of Engineering wishing to change their schedule or enroll late should see their advisors at this time.
School of Business—8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m., Friday, 216 Strong hall.
School of Pharmacy -9 am. to noon, Saturday 215 Bailey.
School of Law-8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m., Friday, in the office of the Dean, Green hall.
University alumni will meet in several cities throughout the United States to hold late Kansas Day celebrations.
On Monday 60 alumni will meet in Portland, Ore., and see the KU movie, "Beyond the Towers."
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will address 150 alumni in Chicago on Friday, Feb. 28.
Baseball players are to meet 4 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 3, in 203 Robinson
gymnasium and not Thursday as
stated in yesterday's Kansas.
Maurice Breidenfal, alumni president, and Fred Ellswood, alumni secretary, accompanied by Richard Wintermote, assistant alumni secretary, and Ray Evans, former KU football star, will speak to alumni at Iola at noon Monday. In the evening they will speak to alumni in Parsons. Movies of the football season and "Beyond the Towers" will be shown.
Baseball Players To Meet
Alumni Mark Kansas Day
The 15th annual Mid-Western Music camp will be held at the University from Monday, June 16, to Sunday, July 27.
Hundreds of attractive red, white, and black folders have been sent high school and college music groups in this area to announce the event.
Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, who started the camp in 1938, will direct the session in 1952.
Nearly 250 high school music students from 15 states joined 100 University students at the successful music camp the past year. A
Charlie Chaplin Film Slated For Tonight
"City Lights," Charlie Chaplin's masterful comedy, will be the film series presentation in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 tonight.
Entertainment To Highlight FacultyClubSundaySuppers
John G. Blocker, professor of business, will visit schools of business throughout the country to study their accounting courses and methods of teaching. From mid-April until June 1 he will attend graduate classes in advanced management courses in the Harvard Graduate School of Business. He will return to KU in the summer session.
Although it was made two decades ago, the film still is one of the nation's most popular motion pictures.
Two University professors have been granted sabbatical leaves of absence, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced today.
Two Professors Granted Leaves
Dr. Blocker also plans to spend part of his leave doing research on the third edition of his text, "Cost Accounting." The first two editions have been adopted in about 200 colleges and universities. A Spanish translation is being made for use in South America.
Charlie Chaplin's performance in this picture has preserved the beauty, comedy and pathos of pantomime at its greatest.
George W. Kreye, associate professor of German, has been granted a leave for the spring and summer sessions. He will do research in the New York Public and Columbia University libraries until May.
In May he will go to Europe and visit the British Museum and National library in Paris, the principal German libraries, and Vienna.
Sam Anderson, instructor in German and Russian, will return to the faculty this semester after a fall semester leave of absence. He did graduate study work at Stanford university.
A buffet supper preceded by an entertainment program will be presented at the Faculty club every Sunday, Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, said today.
Excerpts from the operetta, "The Bartered Bride," to be presented Feb. 4, 5 and 8 in Fraser theater, will be given by principals of the cast Sunday in the lounge of the Faculty club.
The program will be given at 5:30 p.m.
Musical director of the operetta,
Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education, and drama director, Tom Shay, speech instructor, will present the program.
They will be accompanied by Martha Whitten, education junior, piano accompanist for the operetta.
The students giving a sample of the major parts of the operetta will be Phyllis McFarland and Ruth Stutz, fine arts seniors; Fred Tarry, Christine Wiley and Maurice Casey, fine arts sophomores; Bill Oldham and Carla Haber, education juniors; James Ralston, education senior; Ralph King, business senior, and Ernest Dade, college freshman.
similar number is expected this summer, Mr. Wiley said.
Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts will be sponsor of the camp.
Other officials of the 1952 camp will be Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, manager; Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music at the University directeur and Clayton Krebhel, instructor in music education, choral director.
New students who took the placement examinations Jan. 28, and Jan. 29, may learn the exam results at the Guidance bureau, Strong anuex B.
Several nationally - known conductors will be brought to the camp as guest conductors.
Among those to be present are Guy Fraser Harrison, conductor, Oklahoma City Symphony orchestra; Paul Yoder, Chicago conductor, composer and arranger; Richard Duncan, conductor, Omaha Symphony orchestra; Alvin R. Edgar, director of music, Iowa State college; and Gerhard Schroth, Chicago conductor, arranger and composer.
Placement Exam Scores Available
They will serve as guest conductors when the symphony orchestra, concert band, and chorus give two each Sunday during the session.
Students who attend will live in University quarters while taking private lessons and performing in the concert groups.
A big part of the camp will be the extensive recreation program for the students. Swimming, dancing, tennis, and other sports will be provided, as well as parties and dances.
Tuition for the camp, including everything except private lessons, is $250.
Five numbers have been selected for Sunday's carillon program at 3 p.m.
One hundred students took the tests.
Carillon Program To Be Sunday
The program is "Prelude in F" by J. S. Bach; "Waltz in A Flat" by Brahms; Book I of "Pour Les Enfants" by Tensman, including "An Old Song," "The Bouncing Ball," "The Dancing Bear," "Waltz of the Marionettes," "Dresden Figurines," "Vacation Is Over," "Skating," "The Firemen," "A Dream" and the finale; "Fugue in G" for Carillon by Van Den Gheyn, and "Crimson and the Blue."
New students who did not take the tests may take them Saturday, Feb. 9 in 206 Strong. Exams 1 will be given at 9 a.m. and exam 2 at 2 p.m.
Any student who took the examination the past fall may learn his results at the Guidance bureau.
2 Professors Attend Engineering Meeting
Donald G. Wilson and Emory B. Phillips, professors of electrical engineering, attended the winter general meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers Jan. 21 to 25 in New York city.
Professor Phillips presented a research report on "A New Principle is Employed for Sixty-Cycle A-C Network Analysts" which was to be published in the institute's proceedings and transactions. Professor Wilson served as secretary of the AIEE's committee on electronics.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 1, 1952 Letters:
Daily Kansan Editorials
Ike-Taft Fight Splits Ranks Of Kansas GOP
The Republican state committee meeting at Topeka early this week brought the first open clash between the Eisenhower and Taft wings of the party.
The Ike forces emerged victorious by a 56-46 margin on a resolution aimed at testing the strength of the two groups. The resolution recommended that four party officials be included among the delegates-at-large to be selected at the state convention in April. The catch came in the fact that those named are known Eisenhower supporters. Heading the list was Harry Darby, Republican national committeeman.
Since the reins of the state convention also will be in the hands of the pro-Eisenhower group, this resolution will not have any great effect on the final outcome. However, it did make certain the fact that there will be a hard fought campaign to win votes for Taft in Kansas.
Already several Taft-for-President clubs have been formed. At the same time of the meeting of the state committee the Taft forces set up an organization on a state-wide basis. This was not an outgrowth of the committee action but had been in planning for several weeks.
After the resolution recommending the choice of delegates was pushed through, the Taft leaders contended they had been "steamrollerled" and that it would "split the party." However, most observers agreed that the division was inevitable and that the real gripe was that the backers of Taft realized that the Ike forces had gotten a head start on the delegate contest.
The two groups are thus beginning to line up in exactly the same manner as they did in the 1948 election. Four years ago the progressive wing of the Republican party in Kansas led by Harry Darby battled throughout the state for delegates. The result was a solid 13 delegates to 6 delegates victory for Darby over conservatives led by Alf M. Landon.
Thus far this year Landon has not entered the fight. But it is the same men who were with him before who are arrayed against the Eisenhower movement. For example, the group includes Willard Mayberry, the Landon group's unsuccessful candidate for the gubernatorial nomination in 1950.
There will be several more party fights over this same issue before the state convention time rolls around. Between now and next April there will be six congressional district meetings. In each case a tough fight is bound to result. In several of the areas it is obvious now which way the wind is blowing. But in at least two and possibly three districts the results will not be known until the meetings are over.
In 1948 the conservative group was in a better position to win the election than it is now. Then it had control of the counties in which Wichita and Topeka are located. Today the control in those places is with the Darby forces.
It is the obvious desire of the Darby group to send a solid 22-member delegation to the national convention in support of Eisenhower as a favorite son candidate. This at the moment is out of the question. But indications are that the general will have the votes of at least 15 to 16 of his fellow Kansans on the first ballot with the remainder going to Senator Taft.
Joe Taylor.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room
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Associated Press, National Association of Publishers, and by th
National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, New York City
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
Editorial Assistants ... Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahn
Assistant Managing Editors .. Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman
Joe Lastoste, Jim Poweri
City Editor ... Jeanne Lomberti
Assistant City Editors .. Johnny Herrington, Phil Newman
Telegraph Editor ... Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
Charles Burd
Assistant Telegraph Editor .. Max Thompson
Society Editor .. Diana Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors .. Lorena Barlow, Jeanne Fitzgerald
Paulyne Patterson
Sports Editor .. Jackie Jones
Sports Editor ... Jackie Jones
News Adviser ... Victor J. Daniilov
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager Emory Williams
National Advertising Manager Virginia Johnston
Circulation Manager Ted Barbera
Classified Advertising Manager Elaine Mitchell
Promotion Manager Phil Wilcox
Business Advisor R. W. Doores
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept, 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Pickled Peaches Cause Regret
It was with some regret that I, a Kansan and also a former student of Mr. Ise, found that the fancy-food column of a New York paper is heaping praise on the dark colored pickled peaches served in his home.
Dear Mr. Editor:
What has happened to agrarian radicalism? Will future Kansans have to rally their comrades to action with the slogan, "Raise more hell and less pickled beaches?"
Jay V. Grimm, '49 New Haven, Conn
The article referred to by Mr. Grimm was in the daily column conducted by Clementine Paddleford in the New York Herald-Tribune. It appeared on Jan. 23, 1952. It said as follows:
"Pickled peaches, dark colored, are the best-liked meat relish, and with all types of meat. A pip of a recipe we borrowed from Mrs. John Ise, whose husband is professor of economics at the University of Kansas, yes, the same John Ise who wrote "Sod and Stubble." When it's peach time again we will pass the recipe along in our Sunday "How America Eats" series."
The Teachers College Index, Kirksville, Mo., decided recently to let the students blow off some steam. The question put to them was, "What is the most common fault among teachers?"
Comments ..
Some of the answers received were:
The attempt of the teacher to cover the prescribed amount of work regardless of how slowly the students do the work. Too often a student must rush to finish the material in the last two weeks of the quarter. . .
Over emphasis on grades...
Too many persons being teachers because it afforded them the easiest escape from reality. . .
Too much psychic trauma and insolence toward students.
Editor's Note: Don't know too much about some of those faults but that last one sure sounds good.
College girls have been described as listless, pessimistic, confused and obsessed by a fear of the future by a professor of English at Harvard.
In an article called "Have College Women Let Us Down?" Howard Mumford Jones states, "A dark, unreasoning fear has the college girl in its grip. This is her fear of the future dominated by the atom bomb."
Jones feels that the college girl of today is no longer interested in the world around her and does her class work without applying her mind. He adds, however, that possibly the listlessness now evident may be shadowed overnight by some dramatic turn in history.
Editor's Note: Do you think Professor Jones has been dating enough college girls recently?
Department Of Architecture
Gets $250 Anonymous Gift
An anonymous gift of $250 has been given to the department of architecture.
Prof. George Beal, chairman of the department of architecture, said the money would be put into a fund and later used for educational facilities. Other anonymous gifts have been put into the same fund for department equipment, he said.
KEN COLLINS
"Control tower to pilot—coming in too fast—lower your flap."
Who's In The Worst Spot?
Because of production increases during the past two years, the United States has had a much greater need for raw materials. This need has resulted in an economic snag which imperils our relations with several nearby nations.
Pressure is being applied to the situation from this end. The Reconstruction Finance corporation has refused to meet the Bolivian price, in the hope that the South Americans will back down.
Up to now the United States has managed to enforce this refusal. The RFC has bought tin in good amounts from Malaya and other areas at its own price of $1.12 and sometimes less. About 50,000 tons was purchased in 1951, which accounted for more than half of this country's needs. Besides, the U.S. has a reserve which it can fall back on if necessary.
Bolivia, our best source for pure tin, has raised price demands on that material to $1.50 a pound, even though the amount offered by the U.S. ($1.12) is 50 per cent above the pre-Korean price.
But how long can this pressure continue? Bolivia may soon go before the Organization of American States to charge the U.S. with economic aggression. Other Latin American countries sympathize with her position.
On the other hand, if the RFC backs down and pays the requested price, other nations will start raising the prices of vital products. Should war break out, the U.S. would have to pay. And Malaya and other t countries would hop on board the money train.
The problem is further confused by the fact that the U.S. built a smelter during World War II to handle the low-grade tin from Bolivia. No other smelter in the world can handle any large amount of Bolivian ores.
Bolivia may either back down or go into an economic tailspin, for her tin trade with the U.S. has been her livelihood. If her economy folds, all South America will blame this country.
Millions of tax dollars went into the smelter, so if it stands idle, U.S. taxpayers will squawk. But if it runs, we will need Bolivia's tin. The question: Which country is over the tin hoard?
Jim Powers.
News From Other Campuses
Pressure To Win Harmful
Nothing is wrong with intercollegiate athletics which a release from the pressure of winning at any cost will not cure, declared President Stewart H. Smith of Marshall college, Huntington, W. Va. Experience over the years has demonstrated the value of wholesome intercollegiate athletics to the athlete and the educational program, he added.
Study Hall For Pledges
During the first semester of each year all freshmen women and sorority pledges at the University of Idaho will attend compulsory study hall from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.Monday through Thursday. Exceptions are provided for community concerts, plays, church nights, school functions and library permissions. During the second semester those who make a 2.5 average or better are excused.
'Human Relations' At Baylor
Baylor university is offering for young women students what is believed to be the nation's first collegiate course in "human relations." President W. R. White announced that the program is planned to "present factors which will contribute to the balanced life of the college young woman." Attention will be given to areas of health, manners, ethics, group and family relationships and personality development.
More Liberal Studies Urged
Most engineering colleges are producing highly competent specialists, not educated individuals, according to John Day Larkin, dean of liberal studies at Illinois Institute of Technology. Dean Larkin recently decried the trend away from humanistic-social education, and urged a more militant stand by teachers of liberal studies.
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
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ScienceGroup Selects 42
Forty-two students, former students and faculty members have added to membership in Sigma Xi, honorary science research society.
Dr. Charles D. Michener, secretary of the society, said seventeen of the group were admitted to full membership while the remainder were admitted to associate membership.
Admission to full membership means the person has done scientific research of high enough quality to have publication in some science journal. Associate membership means that the person shows promise of research ability.
Those selected are:
Alumni: L. V. Sorg, '27, of Kansas City, Mo.
Faculty: Howard G. O'Connor, geologist with the state geological survey; H. W. Shirer, instructor in surgery at the medical center, and Duane G. Wenzel, assistant professor of pharmacy.
Students or former students: (full membership) Henry V. Beck, Shirley Gleason, H. W. Johnson, F. A. Pileggi, H. E. Risser, Sam Joseph, Moselio Schaechter, Gerald Tajol, Mary J. Taylor, E. N. Wise, S. L. Wood, Sam H. Johnson and William H. Edgerton, all graduate students.
(Associate membership) Sydney Anderson, Donald Asquith, Norman P. Baumann, Samuel W. Bishop, V. J. Christensen, James Conkin, Douglas Cooley, David T. Dailey, James Finley, Richard Frederickson, Edward H. Haynes, Charles A. Lundqist, A. L. Juzzi, Richard Lynness, Laurence R. McAney, Edwin P. Martin, William F. Myers, Thomas A. Milne, Francis W. Prosser, Carlon W. Pryor, Dennis G. Rainey, Fred R. Rollins, Donald F. Squires, Jean M. Squires, and William B. Stallcup, all graduate students.
Firemen Will Hold Fire Defense School
University Extension in cooperation with the city of Lawrence and the office of the Kansas state fire marshall will sponsor a civil defense fire school for representatives of fire departments in the Northeast Kansas area Feb. 12, 13, and 14.
The school which will be held at the Lawrence fire station is one of the first of its kind to be held in the state. It will make available information which representatives can take back and teach to other firemen in their communities.
JANE MCKINNEY
BABY vs. COMMISSION — Mrs. Loren Thompson, until recently a major in Women's Army Corps, wants to be recommissioned, despite army regulation against women who are mothers staying in the WAC's. She will appeal to
Mrs. Anna Rosenberg
Speakers' Bureau Organized Af KU
The University speech and drama department has organized a speakers bureau to provide speakers of both entertaining and informative nature. E.C. Buehler, professor of speech, announced today.
Twenty-five students, trained and experienced in speech arts, will present programs to civic clubs, study groups, high schools, lodges, and churches. Included in the group will be varsity debaters, foreign students, and campus orators.
Professor Buehler said that all programs will be arranged to suit individual local needs and time limits. The only charge is for mileage.
Programs presented in the serious vein will include talks and discussions on wage and price control, house cleaning in inter-collegiate athletics, United States foreign policy in Asia, and flood control in the Missouri valley.
Groups desiring such presentations should contact Professor Buehler at the KU speech and drama department.
gleams as it cleans
cleans as it gleams
Two University students have received recognition in the Atlantic Monthly writing contests for college students.
Anne L. Snyder, College senior from Great Bend, entered a story, "Exit," which the judges placed among the "top" papers. Her instructor was Mrs. Katherine Mix.
Eileen Derr, a correspondence study student living in Forest City, Mo., entered an essay entitled "Comics, Why Not?" It headed the list of "merit" papers. Miss Lottie Lesh was her instructor in creative writing class.
Two Student Writers Win
All entries were written during the 1950-51 school year. The judges accorded national recognition to 20 stories, 20 essays and 20 poems.
NEW Wildroot LIQUID CREAM SHAMPOO
Company Wants Women Grads
More than just a liquid, more than just a cream
... new Wildroot Liquid Cream Shampoo is a combination of the best of both.
Even in the hardest water Wildroot Shampoo washes hair gleaming clean, manageable, curlinviting without robbing hair of its natural oils.
The market research department of the Proctor and Gamble company is looking for women graduates interested in traveling throughout the nation making consumer surveys.
Soapless Sudsy...Lanolin LovelyI
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Although no specific courses are required, liberal arts, secretarial science, household administration, applied arts, chemistry, economics, mathematics, social sciences and others are acceptable.
THREE SIZES:
29 59 98
Friday, Feb. 1, 1952
P. S. To keep hair neat between shampoos use Lady Wildroot Cream Hair Dressing.
After a training period of from six to nine months in the Cincinnati office of the company, expense-paid salaries in groups of two or three are made.
This work involves interviewing of consumers,-housewives, students, and others; contacting the public; accumulating and organizer- regarding product preference, brand acceptance, and other details.
Graduating students interested may write or contact Jack Heysinger, head of the business placement bureau, or Miss Virginia Weiss, Market Research department, Procter and Gamble company, Gwynne building, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Sulphur better than 99.5 per cent pure comes from the brimstone mines of Louisiana and Texas.
Senior Awarded Polio Scholarship
A scholarship in physical therapy has been awarded to Miss Dolores Ann Dean, college senior, under the nationwide professional training program sponsored by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.
Vinton Warner, chairman of the Douglas county chapter of the March of Dimes, said that Miss Dean will receive her training at the KU School of Medicine at Kansas City.
She is one of 30 Kansans to receive a scholarship since the National Foundation expanded its physical
Quack Club Holds Tryouts
Quack club tryouts will take place Saturday morning at 10 at the swimming pool in Robinson. Those trying out are to bring a swimming suit, cap and towel.
therapy program in 1945 to combat a critical shortage of qualified personnel.
The Nationel Foundation has awarded 1802 scholarships in this field but it is estimated that 15,000 physical therapists are still needed. Since 1942 the Foundation has allocated more than $2,000,000 in March of Dimes funds to support the physical therapy program.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 1, 1952
Kansas To Meet UCLA In 1953 Football Game
A one-year football contract between Kansas and the University of California at Los Angeles was announced yesterday by KU Athletic Director Arthur C. (Dutch) Lonborg.
The football game, announced jointly by the athletic directors of the two schools, will take the Jayhawk grid crew to the west coast Sept. 25, 1953 for a night game in Los Angeles.
This will mark the first athletic meeting between the UCLA Bruins and the Jayhawkers, and it will be KU's first engagement with a Pacific Coast conference grid eleven. The Bruins are coached by Red Sanders, who was a coach at Vanderbilt when Coach J. V. Sikes was at Georgia.
Rv JACKIE JONES
Coach S. V. Balsam With the addition of this game the Kansas grid schedule is now complete for 1953.
The schedule should be one of the most attractive and toughest in Kansas gridiron history. The other non-conference foes will include Texas Christian, Southern Methodist and the Oklahoma Aggies.
The women's intramural basketball schedule, which was halted during final exams, began the spring semester with two games in Robinson annex Wednesday.
The game with TCU, the Southwest conference champions this past season, and the one with the Aggies will be played in Lawrence.
Thetas Victors In Women's I-M Basketball Tilt
Last year's champion team, Kappa Alpha Theta continued their winning streak by defeating Temruth 51 to 25 Gamma Phi Beta took a low scoring contest from Alpha Delta Pi, and Sellards hall forfeited to the Jayettes.
Jayettes.
Barbara Quinn led the Theta scoring with fifteen points; Marilyn Muehlback had 12; Sydney Ashton, 13; Carolyn Campbell, seven and Sue Nefs, six. Nancy Gilchrist was the only Theta who didn't crack the scoring column.
Esther Harms continued to lead the team in offensive, as she scored fifteen points. Lois Meils got 6 and Jacqueline Goodbary had 3. Nancy Manspeaker continued to be top defensive star for Temtruth.
In the Gamma Phi Beta-Alpha Delta Pi game, Jane Henry led the scoring for the winners. She tallied ten, while Marilyn Pololl and Janice Januel each had two.
The Gamma Phi defense was at its best, holding the opposition to a meager eight points. Marilyn Hanson was the only player to score for the losers.
As the spring semester begins one Division title has already been won and several others are within a game of their final standings. Delta Delta Delta won their division with a record of four wins and no defeats.
The Thetas lead Division I with three wins and no losses; the Jayettes and Kappa Kappa Gamma are tied with two wins, one tie and no losses in Division II; Foster hall and Alpha Chi Omega lead Division III with three victories and no defeats.
In the other divisions which are still undecided, several teams need only one more victory to clinch the titles.
The freshman AA squad leads Division V with three wins and no losses and Sigma Kappa is at the top of Division VI with the same record.
Your Plymouth Man . . has a used car priced for you.
Plymouth
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph.1000
-Intramural
Round-Up
2 p.m. E—Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs.
Alpha Kappa Lambda, W—Beta
Theta Pi vs. Nu Sigma Nu
Saturday Robinson Gym Fraternity "C"
3 p.m. E-MEN vs. AIA, W—East Side vs. AFROTC
4 p.m. E—Battelfield vs. Stephenson
Independent "C"
W—Jolliffe vs. Varsity Robinson Annex Fraternity "A"
3 p.m. Delta Upsilon vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon
2 p.m. Phi Gamma Delta vs. Phi Kappa Tau
Independent "A"
4 p.m. Don Henry vs. Feather Merchants
Sunday Robinson Gym Independent "A"
2:30 p.m. E - Navy vs. 1222 club
Fraterity "B"
*
W—Gamma Delta vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon
3:30 p.m. E—Delta Chi vs. Sigma Chi, W—Alpha Phi Alpha vs.
Tau Kappa Epsilon Robinson Annex Independent "A"
2:30 p.m. Navy vs. Dark Horses
2:30 p.m. Navy vs. Dark Horses
2:30 p.m. Last Chance vs. Sterling-
4:30 p.m. Varsity vs. Rochdale
5:30 p.m. Twin Pines vs. AXE.
At the beginning of the 1951-52 basketball season, Clyde Lovellette, Jayhawker center, had scored 1093 points.
2 Players Voted To Hall Of Fame
New York —(U.P.)— Harry Heilmann, who would have called it his biggest thrill if he had been alive, and Paul Waner, who had begun to think it never would happen, were the newest "Rookies" in baseball's Hall of Fame today, as reward for their life-long achievements as hitters.
Heilmann and Waner were elected Thursday in the 13th annual balloting by veteran baseball writers in the major leagues, who have been covering the sport for 10 or more years. They went into the shrine at Cooperstown, N.Y., to join such immortals as Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb old Pete Alexander, Walter Johnson, Lou Gehrig, Connie Mack, Cy Young, and many others.
Heilmann, who died last July 9,
only a few days before he had been
scheduled to do the broadcast of the
major league all-star game at Detroit,
received 203 out of a possible
234 votes. Waner received 195 votes.
A total of 176 or 75 per cent, was
necessary for election, and that excluded such other modern stars as Bill Terry, who got 155 votes, and Dizzy Dean, who received 152.
Both Heilmann and Waner were among the game's most outstanding hitters. With the Tigers where he spent most of his long career, Heilmann at times was even a more feared hitter than Cobb, and he wound up with a lifetime mark of 342. At the end of his playing career he became a broadcaster and died after an attack of pneumonia during the height of last season.
Waner, who had an all-time hitting mark of 333 and was one of the seven players in baseball history who made more than 3,000 hits during his lifetime, played through most of his career with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Bait For Red Herring
Memphis, Tenn.— (U.P) —Leo Wurtzburg he said observed the latest in female fashion—a woman wearing mink coat while fishing.
Dick Harp, assistant basketball coach, was co-captain of KU's NC AA runners-up of 1940.
Harzfeld's
spring is
a new skirt
FLANNEL
WITH A
FLARE
Iowa State Faces Jayhawks In Vital Cage Game Saturday
The Kansas Jayhawks, who have suffered defeat in their last two basketball games, will have to improve their playing against Iowa State Saturday night or find themselves out of the picture in the Big Seven conference race.
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The Iowa State quintet will invade Hoch auditorium to meet the Kansas cagers in an important conference clash, particularly for the Jayhawks. Tipoff time will be 7:35 p.m.
The Cyclones have two wins and a pair of losses in the conference standing, and though a win over Coach "Phog" Allen's crew would not give the Staters a very big boost in the Big Seven, it would just about wipe out any chances for Kansas to win the title.
The Jayhawks' only chance to win the Big Seven is to go undefeated into the March 7 encounter with the State Wildcats, and then win that one.
The Iowa State team packs plenty of scoring power, and could give the Kansans plenty of trouble. In the Big Seven pre-season tournament over all losses in losing to Stanford of the Pacific Coast conference.
Coach Allen said he was very disappointed in the play of his starting quad against the Oklahoma A&M Wednesday. Bill Hougland was the only one of the starting five who
played ball against the Aggies, Allen added.
Lovellette, who was halted-at 18 points, had his worst night of the season, but was bothered most of the game with a re-injury of an ankle hurt in the K-State game. Allen said that he expected the Indiana All-American to be ready for the game Saturday night.
Several substitutes, particularly B. H, Born, Dean Smith and John Keller gave fine performances against the Aggies, and although the starting lineup has not been announced for Saturday there is a possibility that some changes will be made.
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Page 5
Nebraska High Stars Ruled Ineligible To Play
The Kansas State athletic council has ruled ineligible two freshmen who the University of Nebraska claimed were recruited illegally by members of the Wildecat basketball coaching staff.
The two Omaha South High school basketball players, Stanley Schaetzle and Dave Bell, recently enrolled at Kansas State.
The new ruling went into effect following a meeting of the Big Seven conference faculty representatives last December.
The story came to light Thursday when the Omaha World-Herald stated that Nebraska had filed or would file a formal complaint with the conference asking for a hearing on the matter at a meeting in Kansas City Feb. 28.
According to reports, Keith Lambert, an assistant coach at K-State visited one of the boys Jan. 16 at Omaha. The boys were invited to a basketball game in Manhattan and accepted. They then enrolled there.
The specific charge is that Kansas State violated a new Big Seven rule which prohibits "personal solicitation of athletes off the campus by members of the athletic staff or representatives of the athletic staff."
Another report from the World-Herald claimed that the boys also did some tryouts while at Manhattan. This would be a definite breach of the new conference ruling.
Kansas State coach Jack Gardner said that the boys did shoot some baskets but he did not watch them.
The Nebraska faculty representative to the Big Seven, Dean Earl S. Fullbrook, said yesterday, "We've come to the place in the conference where we will have to live up to our rules or forget them altogether."
Miami. Fla.-(U.P.)-Promoter Jim Norris, backed by contracts and commissions, said today he would insist at tomorrow's "big conference" that Jersey Joe Walcott meet Ex-Champion Ezzard Charles in a return title bout for the International Boxing club.
At his suburban Coral Gables home, big, brown-haired Jim said he expected "no trouble" from 38-year-old Walcott or Manager Felix Bocchiochic because "I must regard them as men who will honor their contracts until they prove otherwise."
Promoter Insists Walcott Fight Charles Or Rocky
But if the champion and his pilot do "prove difficult" at the conference here and seek permission to fight Harry Matthews for another promoter, "I certainly will not grant them a release—either from their contract with Charles or from their ironclad contract with the IBC."
Manager Bochicchio has threatened, in the press, to break away from Norris and his IBC, and have wacock fight Matthews at Las Vegas in early May unless Norris can match the $250,000 guarantee offered Walcott by Harry Hunt of Los Angeles.
Norris grinned amiably when the break-away threat was mentioned. He said, "I don't believe Felix and Joe would do anything like that. They're too intelligent to get all tangled up in court actions."
Walcott was tentatively slated to give an exhibition at Orlando, Fla. tonight and to arrive here with Bochicchio tomorrow morning.
Meanwhile Walcott was threatened with the loss of his crown by the National Boxing association and the New York Boxing commission if he attempted to make his first defense against Matthews in May, President Dave Rochon of the NBA announced in Montreal that the title would be vacated on March 16 unless Jersey Joe defends before then.
Denver university, paced by Don Brown a freshman from Colorado Springs, swept a dual swimming victory from the Kansas swimming team, 49 to 26, in Robinson pool Thursday.
Chairman Robt. K. Christenberry of the New York commission, who has given Walcott until Tuesday to sign for a defense against Charles or Rocky Marciano, said a May night with Matthews would be "too and against an opponent who is 'a contender."
KU Swimmers Beaten By DU
The strong yearling erased existing pool marks in the 120-yard individual medley and 100-yard free style and anchored Bob Seymour's troupe to a third new standard in the 400-yard free style relay.
University Daily Kansan
His 1:16.7 in the medley lowered the 12:21.1 figure set by Dick Eflin of KU three weeks ago against Nebraska. His .56.7 clocking in the 100 erased Eflin's mark of 59.6.
At the same time, Pettit, who trailed Lovellette by a tenth of a point last week, was held to 19 points by Tulane. His 336 points in 13 games for a 25.8 average is still good enough for second place in the national scoring race.
Denver swept the distance relay in 3:53.4, wiping out the Kansas 4:02.6 mark.
A 31 point scoring spree against Kansas State and a below par showing by Bobby Pettit, Louisiana State university sophomore, gave Clyde, Lovellette, Kansas' All-American center, a firm grip on first place in the major-college individual scoring race, according to the latest figures released by the N.C.A.A. service bureau.
Although Kansas' string of 13 straight victories was terminated Saturday by Kansas State, Lovelette's 31 points boosted his average to 26.9 a game. He has amassed 376 markers in 14 games.
Clyde Lovellette Leads Scoring
Mark Workman (24.6) of West Virginia, Chuck Darling (24.5) of Iowa, and Don Meineke (24.5) of Dayton round out the top five scorers.
Friday, Feb. 1, 1952
Dick Groat of Duke with a 24.2
Villanova 66, Scranton 53
Cage Scores
Penn, State 77, American U. 52
Geengetown (D.C.) 75, Canisius 67
average per game (making him the sixth highest scorer) leads the nation's top ten average scorers in total points with 417. Lovellette's 376 points places him third in this group.
An 18-point effort against Oklahoma A&M Wednesday (the first time this year that Clyde has fallen below the 20 point mark) will lower his impressive 26.9 average.
So. Carolina 62, Georgia 61
Loyola (Md.) 62, Catholic U. 44
Mississippi State 107, Birmingham
Southern 72
Southern 72
Eastern Carolina 69, High Point 64
Central Carolina 72, Mount Union 50
Heidelberg 75, Ohio Northern 58
St. Louis 62, Ohio State 58
Minot State 65, Mayville Teachers 54
Murray (Ky.) 93, Evansville 68.
Japanese newspaper mills have an annual potential production capacity of 200,000 short tons.
Kansas Jayhawker basketball team tied with Missouri for second place in the Big Seven conference last year. Both teams won eight and lost four conference games.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 1, 1952
If You Are A Woman On A Military Base, You Need To Know Your Service Etiquette
If you have a man in the service and have been wondering whether or not he couldn't take that to military or base, here are a few helpful hints.
Don't think it will be a gala weekend at a military school. You may have to spend a lot of time alone. Even when you're with him there are usually few places to go and if you feel you can't be happy justalking with (or looking at) yourman, better forget about visiting.
A man in basic training can't go into town, so it's wise to make sure there's a Guest house on the post. Reservations should be made three weeks in advance. If he's past the cookie stage and has a 48 or 72-hour pass and you prefer to stay in town, start early to track down a room.
Local USO's, civilian Travelers
Aids and Y's have a list of available rooms with families as well as in approved hotels. However you swing it, a confirmed reservation is advisable.
Official Bulletin
As to packing for your visit, forget the something-for-the-boy's urge. Wear trim, feminine clothes—but nothing flashy; on a base a woman is conspicuous enough without accentuating it.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira nardi 5 fevrier a sept heures et demi dans la salle 113 Strong.
Be sure to bone up on ranks or grades. When you meet anyone in the armed services you are safe in calling him or her by grade if you don't know or didn't catch the name.
Lutheran Student association cost supper, 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity University, Camavelli N. Varughese, KU student from India, Mission Abroad
A visit with someone you know very well can be wonderful and worth it for both of you—if you plan carefully enough and if you're mature enough.
YWCA Cabinet retreat, 9 a.m.
Saturday, Henley house. Wear jeans
Danforth Chapel service, 8:30 a.m
Sunday, Rev. Norman Brandt,
speaker, Sponsored by Gamma Delta
GammaDelta cost supper, 5:30 p.m
Sunday, Immanuel Lutheran church,
installation of officers and panel discussion,
"The Layman in the
church."
Ph.D. Reading exam in German,
- I1 a.m. Saturday, 306 Fraser.
Canuteson Attends Meetings And Conferences In New York Ralph I. Canuteson, director of Watkins hospital, flew to New York Wednesday to attend a semi-annual National Tuberculosis association conference. Dr. Canuteson is president of the Kansas Tuberculosis association.
He will also attend a meeting of college hospital directors. The meeting purpose is to set up standards of student health work and draw up a program for doctors in health administration.
requirements For Officers Naval Reserve Revised
Revised requirements for the office candidate program of the U.S. Naval Reserve have eliminated the previous mathematics requirements in the general line commissions, to Navy ROTC office said today.
Application for the officer candidate program are accepted from college graduates or those within 20 days of receipt of degree. Applicants must be between 19 and 26 years of age and have not received their selective service induction notice.
Sally Glenn To Wed Officers Candidate
Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Glenn, Osborne, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sally Eleanor, to Officers' Candidate William Robert White, son of Mr. and Mrs. William F. White, Stewart Manor, Long Island.
Miss Glenn is a College sophomore and a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. White was graduated from the University of Buffalo and is a member of Sigma Alpha Nu fraternity. The marriage will take place in March.
Latest Male Fashions Copy Cave Man Styles
Milwaukee—(U.P.)—The y o u n g American male soon will return to cave man clothing styles to attract the attention of his lady fair, a Chicago clothing industry leader says.
"The cut of the suit suit is the same, but the latest thing in color is black." Wertheimer, sales representative of a Chicago clothing firm, reported.
The leopard skin suit was on display at a spring exhibition of the museum. Color Cult comes in three colors, all faced with imitation leopard skin.
Kappa Eta Kappa To Entertain
Gamma of Kappa Eta Kappa, engi-
neering fraternity, will hold a party from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday at 1653 Indiana street. Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. Edward L.
Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lindsay and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Atchison.
The University Women's club will entertain at tea at 3 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 7, in the Museum of Art.
So Fresh!
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University Women Plan Entertainment
star bread slice sandwich cookie
Charles Oldfather, assistant professor of law, will give a musical program, singing ballads and accompanying himself on the guitar.
COFFEE CUP
Nothing's as good as light fluffy cakes and crisp cookies from Drake's. Fresh from our ovens to you. Try some today!
DRAKE'S BAKERY
Cake
Mrs. R. G. Mahieu, general chairman of the tea, will be assisted by the following committees: tea table Mrs. J. N. Carman and Mrs. Arthur C. Lorborg; refreshments Mrs. C. Lorborg; Midschrift Mrs. McClunm; Midthaice George Kreey, Mrs. Ruth McNair, Mrs. Everett W. Lothrop and Mrs. Guy Loubrowrion.
907 Mass.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sanner, Wellington, announce the engagement of their daughter, Donna Ruth, to Bernard Malkmus, son of Mr. and Mrs. R.B. Malkmus, Wellington.
mrs. Guy Loomis
Hostesses will be Mrs. Guy Keeler,
Mrs. Karl Klooz, Mrs. Burton Marvin
and Miss Winnie Lowrance.
The program has been arranged by Mrs. James Nickerson. She was assisted by Mrs. Kenneth Anderson, Mrs. Clayton Krehbiel and Mrs. C. F. Nelson.
Sanner Engaged To Wellington Man
Miss Sanner is a fine arts sophomore and a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Malkmus attends the University of Missouri and is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
Two Foreign Students Accept Jay Janes
Paromita Chowla, College junior from Punjab, India, and Georgette Figueredo, graduate student from Mexico City, Mexico, have accepted membership invitations in the Jay Janes, women's pep club.
The two women were among the women foreign students who attended a Christmas party given by the Jay Janes in their honor. They will be regular members of the club, but will not be asked to pay club dues. Their uniforms will be furnished by the Lawrence Rotary club.
Interfrotenity Pledge Dance
The Interfrotenity Pledge Group
This star was a five foot long snake, and his director is Gloria Cesar, a dark-eyed Peruvian.
He Died To Get Into Movies
"The first thing I did was put him back in his box so he wouldn't bite anbody else." she said.
This moccasin was featured in a scene in which he was supposed to biter Walter Brennan as he drank from a pond. The scene took an unusual form; since snakes, Miss Cesar explained, are the world's dumbest actors.
"You can't teach them anything," she added. "I got him to strike by tickling his head with a feather."
The cinema city's only female snake director has rented her reptiles to many a picture, and recently one of her "actors," a deadly water moccasin, starred in "Cry of the Swamp," at 20th Century-Fox studio. But the "star" got temperamental and took four bites out of her arm, and Miss Cesar has been recuperating ever since.
Brennan was miles away during this sterling performance. His part on the scene was shot weeks ago, and the show's video was added by trick photography.
In fact, Gloria confided, audiences who gasp at snakes in movies are seeing either a trick shot or a dead
Hollywood-U.P.) Hollywood's most pampered movie a bit his director, acted only when tickled and finally had to die to get into the movies.
She's young and beautiful enough to be in pictures herself. But she prefers working behind the camera with the西斯们 hiss and slither.
Shaw Is President Of Pi Beta Phi
Martha Jane Shaw, education junior, was recently elected president of Pi Beta Phi sorority for the spring semester.
Prevue Saturday 11:15 p.m.
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Other officers elected were Anne Lambert, vice-president; Suzann Kinkead, corresponding secretary; Joy Leybourn, recording secretary; Patty Lloyd, treasurer; Betty Dickson, assistant treasurer, and Jacqueline Bushey and Frannie Mason, censors.
Jo Anna March, program chairman;
Marilyn Hawkinson, scholarship chairman;
Jacqueline Bushey, assistant scholarship chairman; Mary Crews, house manager; Mary Lynn Updegraff, song leader, and Marilyn Ringler, intramurals manager.
Kappa Sig-Circ O Tea Dance
Kappa Sigma fraternity will entertain Chi Omega sorority house to a house from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Chaparones will be Mrs. John R. Scott and Mrs. Edna M. Stewart.
Kappa Sig-Chi O Teq Dance
Today-Saturday
Frankie Laine
"Sunnyside of the Street"
SUNDAY
From Luke Short's Saturday Evening Post Novell
Paramount presents
Edmond
OBRIEN • DECARLO • FITZGERALD
SILVER CITY
Color by TECHNICOLOR
Late News Color Cartoon
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Today-Saturday
"Son of Dr. Jekyll"
"Ghost Town Renegades"
--snake. After her players have to die to get into pictures.
SUNDAY——MONDAY——TUESDAY
BLOOD-CHILLING PERILS in the SCREAMING JUNGLE!
BLOOD-CHILLING PERILS in the SCREAMING JUNGLE!
ELEPHANT STAMPEDE
starring
BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY JOHNNY SHEEFFIELD A MONOGRAM
Co-Feature
SEE HITLER SLAIN IN LOVE NESTLE
COLUMBIA PICTURES
PRESENTS
The MAGIC FACE
starring LUTHER ADLER • PATRICIA KNIGHT
STO
"If a drop if left around, and 20 years later somebody with a cut finger touched the drop, it would be the same as if the person had been bitten."
For later scenes Miss Cesar killed her star by injecting about 50 shots of formaldehyde while studio workmen "hung from the snake." She then could mold the snake's body into any position needed for the camera. Between shots she soaked the corpse in formaldehyde to keep it pliable.
"Most movie snakes are dead since it is very dangerous to work around live snakes," she explained. "Their poison never loses its potency.
Some movie starts demand fancy dressing rooms and limousines, but acting snakes are even more temparamental. Five moccasins, imported from Georgia, died of "unhappiness" in Hollywood before Miss Cesar could direct them.
The fifth was pampered more than the leading lady.
After the movie was finished, this actor was made into a wallet.
"The stage had to be kept warm or the snake would go to sleep." The snake director. "The lights and the noise bothered him, too. And he ate only a special kind of frog."
No other movie star can make that statement.
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Plus • Bugs Bunny Color Cartoon - Comedy and Latest World News
EVENING FEATURES 7:39 and 9:37
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Kansan Classified Advertising
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TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Leave K.C. 7:30 a.m.
Leave KU 5:50 p.m. Highway 10. Call
Bob Breedlove, Indep. 8552 after 8:00
p.m. 2-7
RIDERS: From Kansas City, Mo., 63rd and Brookside, to University, Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 6:30 a.m. Rheva Spitacca, Jackson 1936. 2-6
COMMUTING: 8-5 daily from K.C. Kan
Car pool or *3*s wanted. Call Fa. 7890
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether tour or individual itineraries. Phone 212-876-3661, Downs Travel 1015 Mile
Ask us about family rates, skype and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book your cruise this summer. Call Miss Glesman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 50.
ice, 1015 Mass.
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75e hair trim. 3-6
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service, Call Mrs.
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. ??75 after 4 p.m. Appt. 4, upstairs. Ph. ??75 after 4 p.m.
YPING- Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West tf
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these tying tests. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Pt 1601
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment available to perform efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. 't
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
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STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tf
CRYSTAL CASTLE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malls, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open to customers. Air-conditioned. Open to am. tft midnight. Crystal Cake. 609 Vt.
TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stenil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tf
IAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff includes veterinarians, fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands priced below $20 to music to music radio. See these values at B. F Goodrich, 292 Mass.
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Its membership over these decades has been studded with many names famous in science and its work has done much to bring the once incredible into the realm of ordinary.
"None of the folklore ghosts has ever operated while an investigator of the society was present in the haunted house," Dr. Saol pointed out, and we've never been able to get a poltergeist (mischievous鬼) to perform under our eyes. Spirit photography is all fake and an amazing number of frightening occurrences have been traced to rats,
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entrance. A Instructor or graduate student.
Quiet surroundings. C132TM
Science Knocks Ghost Stories But Avoids Spiritualism Stand
LARGE, NICELY furnished room in quiet, modern home, convenient to KU
Friday, Feb. 1, 1952
London----(U.R)----Ghosts are one of the casualties of the atomic age. Dr. S. G. Soal, president of the Society for Psychical Research believes.
But he excludes the raucous wraiths who clank chains or traditionally utter cerie shrieks in the gloomy corridors of moated castles and ancient manor houses.
"I mean," said Dr. Soal, a lecturer in mathematics at London University, "the 'ghost' conjured up out of subconscious and visible only to the person who has himself constructed it. That's the only ghost we recognize and some of them have seemed very real to the people involved.
For more than 70 years the society has been inquiring into any event not explicable by ordinary means—haunted houses, telepathy, clairvoyance, prophecy, spirit photography and a long list of the weird and wonderful.
But we have been getting fewer and fewer reports of these. This materialistic era is not the best atmosphere for these phenomena. You might say the mental climate is too much negative in a scientific society there is hostility to anything that can't be explained immediately and patly."
"Along the years we've managed to establish hypnotism—one of our achievements—and telepathy. Some scientists still scoff at telepathy but we regard it as proved and many others scientists agree with us that in some as yet unexplained way one person can learn what is in another's mind. And this function apparently is not affected by time or space."
Dr. Soal told of experiments with a London housewife, Mrs. Gloria Stewart, who was taken to a point near Antwerp, Belgium, and under strict test conditions read cards being turned up in London.
The society, as such, takes no stand on spiritualism, but Dr. Soal said he personally believes it significant that no medium has been able to reveal the message in a sealed envelope left with the society by Sir Oliver Lodge, one of spiritualism's staunchest adherents."
loose roof tiles, tree branches tapping against windows or plain imagination.
"Her reactions were instantaneous." he said.
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TRAILERS FOR RENT. two wheel and four wheels. Have some good used trailers for sale; also a 1938 Ford two-door, Hatchet Trailer rental, 2-41 North 3rd.
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University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 1, 1952
News Roundup
Truck Drivers Walkout In Southern, Midwest States
By THE UNITED PRESS
About 13,500 long-haul truck drivers went on a strike today in 13 southern and midwestern states, and 3,000 truck freight handlers walked out in a wildcat strike in Chicago.
Officially, 10,000 drivers in the South walked out at midnight with the collapse of wage negotiation talks. Another 3,500 were idled in the Midwest.
The walkout came when word seeped out that union representatives had accepted an 18-cent hourly wage hike for 40 hours a week. The rank and file membership sought a 48-hour pay scale for a 40-hour week.
UN Says Russia Broke China Treaty
Paris—(U.P.)—The United Nations general assembly found Russia guilty today of breaking its friendship treaty with Nationalist China, and then killed a Russian proposal for blanket admission of UN applicants sponsored by the Communist bloc and western countries.
California Red Leaders To Stand Trial
Los Angeles—(U.R.)—The 15 top leaders of the California Communist party go on trial today in federal court for conspiring to teach and advocate the violent overthrow of the government.
The trial, regarded by government attorneys as second in importance only to the trial and conviction of 11 "first-team" Communists last year in New York, is expected to last at least four months.
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Programs Will Emphasize Brotherhood
Special mission programs emphasizing brotherhood have been planned by the Lutheran Student Association of America as the February program for their Sunday evening meetings.
P. N. Varughese, Christian student from India now attending KU, will open the series Feb. 3 with a talk on "Mission Abroad" in the church parlors of the Trinity Lutheran church, 13th and New Hampshire.
Rev. H. L. Smith, president of the Lawrence Ministerial alliance, will address the group Feb. 10 on "Mission at Home."
ance in the "University Day o Prayer" service, sponsored by the KU Student Religious council, will be Feb. 17.
A visiting missionary speaking on the topic "Here Am I" will close the series Feb. 24.
An interdenominational observ-
Both the weekly cost-supper at 6 p.m. and the program following are open to all University students.
Mayor Keeps Busy
New Britain, Conn. — (U.P.)—The job of mayor can be a strenuous one. The office of John L. Sullivan reports the city's chief executive has taken part in more than 1,000 ceremonies—an average of two a day.
Students May Apply For Jayhawker Work
Anyone interested in working on the secretarial staff of the Jay-hawker magazine may apply now by either signing up in the Jay-hawker office, J-211 or by contacting Dianne Stonebraker, 3450.
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Daily Kansan
Woolley Resigns As Union Manager
dy work
king Jay-
now Jay-
con-
3450.
w to
at staff
4.
L. E. Woolley, manager of the Student Union building, has resigned effective July 1.
49th Year
Monday, February 4, 1952
Woolley plans to enter the bank ing and finance business in Osborne, Kan. next summer.
No.81
"I have been considering this move for some time. Last year I accepted the position of director of the Student Union on a temporary basis for one year only," he said.
Since 1946 Woolley has been manager of the book store and last July he assumed the management of the entire building, Dr. Laurence C. Woodruff, chairman of the Union operating committee, paid high tribute to Woolley's work.
"The Student Union book store has grown under Mr. Woolley's management to one of the most efficient and economical on college campuses," Dean Woodruff said. "During the past year he assumed willingly the burden of the details entailed by construction of the $1,500,000 addition to the Union.
A graduate of Washburn university in 1940, Woolley took graduate work at KU the following year, and was assistant instructor in economics. For the next three years he worked for the Cessna Aircraft corporation in Wichita, rising to director of purchasing. He then served two years in the Navy Supply corps.
"His cheerful dealings with students and careful attention to the details of management have brought the Union through a trying period. His contribution to the book store, the Memorial Union, and the University community will be sorely missed."
He returned to KU in 1946 to organize the book store. He also taught classes in industrial purchasing and credit management in the school of business. During the past two summers he has been a lecturer in special retailing courses at Northwestern university and the University of Bridgeport. He has
Association of College Stores in postal rate matters before the Federal Trade commission and congressional committees.
Sophomore Class To Introduce Yell
"What's the score?—54" will be heard tonight at the Colorado-Kansas game. The sophomore class, distinguished by royal blue crew hats and sitting in a reserved section, will be giving yells not only for KU but for their class.
School spirit is essential for a good school, the sophomores say. And class spirit will help school spirit, they reason. The crew hats, with the numerals 54 on them, will distinguish the sophoromes and add to class loyalty.
The hats and class color blue were chosen by a council composed of a representative from each organized house and the sophomore class officers.
THE BAND
FACULTY CLUB GETS OPERETTA PREVIEW— Principals in "The Bartered Bride," operetta which opens a four-night stand in Fraser theater tonight, presented excerpts from the operetta at the Faculty club Sunday. Seated in the first row, left to right, are Christine Wiley, fine arts sophomore; Ruth Stutz, fine arts senior; and Phyllis McFarland, fine arts senior. Standing are Maurice Casey, fine arts sophomore; Balph King, business senior; and James Salston education senior—Kansas photo by Jim Murray.
OperaGuildToGive'BarteredBride InFirstPerformanceAtFraserToday
The first performance of "The Bartered Bride," a presentation of the University Light Opera guild, will be given at 8:15 p.m. today in Fraser theater.
Custom Of Ground-Hog Day Goes Back To Fourth Century
The comic opera will also be given Tuesday and Friday at 8:15 p.m. and at 3:15 p.m. Thursday. Tickets may be obtained at the box office in Green hall. ID cards will not admit students.
"The Bartered Bride" is the fifth annual presentation of the guild and is being given by members of the University players and three honorary music organizations, Mu Phi Epsilon, Phi Mu Alpha and Sigma Alphos.
By LORENA BARLOW
Directors are Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education, music direction; Thomas Shay, instructor in speech, dramatic direction; Clayton Krebhiel, instructor in music education, choral direction; Leo Horacek, instructor in music education, assistant music director, and G. Criss Simpson, associate professor of organ and theory, technical adviser.
Ground-hog day began as a church festival, entitled Candlesmas day, celebrated in commemoration of the presentation of Christ in the Temple. It was celebrated on Feb. 14, 40 days after Epiphany, in the fourth century.
According to custom, winter is to continue for six weeks because the ground-hog saw his shadow Saturday—that is, if he was out looking for his shadow.
It is strange how such customs are accepted without query. Stranger still are their origins and how they are changed while being handed down through the centuries.
The celebration spread from Jerusalem and was moved to Feb. 24 days after the newly established feast of Christmas. In 542 it was introduced throughout the Eastern empire by Justinian, and has been observed as a festival of Christ.
In the West the celebration was instituted in the Eighth century and is now called Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary. It embodies a much older tradition and is preeminently a festival of the Virgin Mother.
The association of Ground-hog day, as we know it, with Candlemas day is an American variation of the tradition, long widespread in the Christian world, that a sunny Candlemas day predicts a cold spring. It is reflected in the Scottish saying: "If Candlemas is fair and clear, there'll be two winters in the year."
The celebration is so called in the U.S. because of the supposition that the ground-hog emerges on Feb. 2 from winter sleep to observe the approach of spring. If he sees his shadow he retires to his burrow for six more weeks of winter. If, however, the day is cloudy, he remains above ground, confident of continuing mild weather.
The plot concerns the arrangement of the marriage of Marie, the heroine, to Vashek, a simple peasant lad. Marie jilts Vashek for her true love, Jenik, and the couple attempt to outwit the marriage broker, Kezal.
Marie, will be sung by Phyllis McFarland, fine arts senior; Jenik, by Frederick Tarry, fine arts sophomore; Vashek, by Bill Oldham, education junior, and Keazal, by James
Campus Police Tow Faculty Cars
Cars of faculty members are being towed away in cases where violators have received an "excessive number" of tickets and have ignored repeated warnings, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor, said today.
Campus police are cracking down on faculty traffic violators.
The towing order has been in effect more than a year but there was no need of its enforcement until lately, Mr. Nichols said.
"At least two cars have been towed away in the last week," Campus Police Chief Joseph Skillman said. "Our plans are to tow away more if violations continue."
When a car is towed away it is necessary for the faculty member to pay the tow charge. There is no way of making faculty members pay traffic fines. Students, however, cannot register without having paid traffic fines.
Mr. Nichols said the procedure is that if a faculty member has an excessive number of tickets and has no parking permit he is notified to make application for a permit. If he has a permit, he must park in police-specified zones.
Hata, by Ruth Stutz, College junior; Ludmila, by Christine Wiley, fine arts sophomore; Exmaralda, by Carla Haber, education junior; Micha, by Ralph King, business senior, and Principal, by Ernest Dade, College freshman.
Ralston. education senior.
A special guild orchestra of 24 pieces will play for the performances.
Physical examinations were given to about 275 students last week, Watkins hospital authorities reported. During the three day period for scheduled examinations, approximately 250 students were examined. About 150 of these were new students and the other 100 were students who had transferred into the School of Education.
Students Given Physical Exams
Twenty-six stragglers and persons who had missed their appointments were given physicals Saturday.
MARGARET HABEIN
P. E. B. HARRIS
Concert Series To Feature Italian Met Star
The University Concert course will present Cesare Siepi, Italian artist, as its third attraction of the season at 8:20 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch auditorium. ID cards will admit students.
During his first season as leading basso at the Metropolitan, Cesare Siepi received honors in 45 performances. He appeared in the roles of Philip II in "Don Carlos," Don Basilio in "Barber of Seville," Mephistopheles in "Faust" and Colline in "La Boheme."
He was chosen by Toscanini for his Verdi Memorial concert in Carnegie hall in January. With the NBC symphony Siepi was soloist in Verdi's Requiem and with the Chicago symphony in a performance of the Mozart Requiem.
Habein Granted Leave Till July
Television featured him as a soloist on "Voice of Firestone" and engaged him for two appearances on the "Show of Shows."
Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, has been granted a leave of absence until July 1, it was announced today by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. She will use the time for full time study in the KU Graduate school to complete work for the Ph.D. degree in English.
Cesare Siepi was born in Milan in 1923. He began singing at the age of 15 and two years later entered the studio of Maestro Chiesa. In March, 1941 he won first prize at the national song competition in Florence. This honor attracted the attention of opera managements throughout Italy. In June Siepi made his professional debut as Sparafucile in "Rigoletto" in the town of Schio near Venice.
With the outbreak of the war, Siepi's operatic career in Italy was interrupted. He spent the war years in Switzerland, enlarging his repertoire and singing concerts for radio. In 1946 he returned to Italy for a second debut, this time in Verdi's "Nabuco" in Venice.
When La Scala of Milan was reopened at Christmas of 1946 with "Nabucco," Siepi was in the cast. He became one of its leading stars and since has been associated with the opera company.
Under Toscanini at La Scala in 1948. Siepi appeared in performances of Boito's "Mefistofele" and "Werone." In the spring of 1950 he sang the Verdi Requiem both with Toscani at La Scala and with Mitropoulos at the Florence May festival. In Great Britain Siepi has sung at the Edinburgh festival, at Covent garden and Albert hall in London.
Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, will be in charge of the office of the dean of women during Miss Habein's absence. The two have been dean and assistant dean together since 1946.
Assisting Miss Peterson on a halftime basis will be 'Mary Peg Hardman, a graduate student in guidance and counseling. She will direct the women's student employment service and women's activities.
During her leave Miss Habein will be preparing her doctoral dissertation. She is making a study of the writings of the late Kate Stephens, KU alumna and teacher, who in the latter 19th century went to New York and became one of the leading women writers of the era.
University Daily Kansan Monday, February 4, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
Moon Mullins Boosts Estimations Of K-S
The recent statement by Larry (Moon) Mullins, Kansas State athletic director, in reference to the charges of illegal recruiting should serve to boost any estimations of the caliber of officials at that school.
When it became known the K- State athletic council had declared two freshmen basketball players ineligible as a result of the charges, instead of roaring a defense at the press, he quietly issued a complete statement. The facts as they had developed in the matter were all presented.
He even went so far as to admit that his department had been at fault part of the time. In reference to the charge that the boys were given tryouts on the campus-before they enrolled, he said:
"The athletic department of Kansas State college cannot justify the fact that the Omaha boys were issued equipment and worked out in our gymnasium prior to enrollment."
Apparently Moon Mullins felt that K-State was going by the rules. In his statement he cites four memorandums or telephone calls between the school and conference officials in getting the matter straight.
Furthermore, as soon as the affair came to light he checked on all facts, interviewed the boys involved, and presented the information to the Kansas State athletic council. In addition, letters explaining the situation were immediately sent to all Big Seven schools.
The athletic council heard the facts and ruled that neither of the boys was eligible until the question was heard by the conference meeting. Even then they may not play. Mullins told them that although they would be allowed to keep their athletic scholarships they should not think that conference officials would permit them to be eligible at Kansas State.
Elsewhere in the conference, word were not being considered as carefully in the statements being made. The athletic director at Nebraska, George (Potsy) Clark, gave out with a blast at Coach Jack Gardner of K-State. However he did it under the guise of defending the youths involved.
Clark said, "it is unfortunate that two kids have to be the goat." Now if this had been his real point he
would have been treating them more fairly if he had said nothing. In that way there would have been less publicity directed at them and more common sense used in judging the situation.
But instead he continued by saying, "It is the coach who should be held responsible. I am not for making a national reputation for Jack Gardner and if he is bigger than Kansas State then something is wrong with that institution."
Whether or not the Kansas State athletic department violated conference rules has not been settled yet. When it is settled it won't be done by a group of coaches making wild charges but by a conference committee which will consider facts.
Until that is done let us all live up to the standard of conduct set by Mullins in his forthright statement. J.A.T.
Short Ones
Our favorite coed, Iva Latepaper, flunked her finals. Last summer when she was choosing her wardrobe for school she forgot to buy any blouses with stiff white cuffs.
Overhauling a car is an expensive job—and it can be even more costly when it has to be done by a traffic officer.
The by-products of gasoline are frequently found in the hospital.
Automobiles would be safer if the horsepower of the engines were geared to the horse sense of the drivers.
Too many drivers think the only way they can lose control of their cars is by failing to keep up with the installments.
It is difficult to understand why the officials in Washington recently gave the Princess a key to the city. After all, just a little pull will open almost any door there.
A lady driver reports her watch was stolen from her wrist as she signaled for a turn. And let that be a lesson to anyone else who doesn't plan to go straight.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KIL.336
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Sdn., Associated Publisher, International Conference Press, and National Advertising Services, New York City.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editorial Chief... Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants... Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahn
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lau Fry, Ben Holman
Joe Lastefic, Jim Pawers
City Editor ... Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phi Nedman,
Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
Telegraph Editor ... Charles Burch
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Max Thompson
Society Editor ... Dianne Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Paulyne Patterson
Sports Editor ... Jackie Jones
News Advisor ... Vince Desni
Editor-in-Chief Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants Anne Snyder, Jay Taylor
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager Emory Williams
National Advertising Manager Virginia Johnston
Circulation Manager Ted Barbera
Classified Advertising Manager Elaine Mitchell
Promotion Manager Phil Witko
Business Adviser R. W. Doores
The prospect of a good job is the reason most students go to college, according to results of the Associated Collegiate Press national poll of student opinion.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan, every afternoon during the University year except holidays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan; Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Comments
The "desire for more knowledge" is another frequently stated reason, but only a few attribute this motive to other students.
College students from all parts or the country were asked to pick the one or two choices which came closest to their reasons for attending college. The results were:
1. A good job after college ... 53%
2. Desire for more knowledge ... 36%
3. To find a mate ... 2%
4. It was "the thing to do" ... 3%
5. The parents wished it ... 4%
6. None of these ... 2%
Students were then asked: "Which of these reasons do you feel fits best for the majority of college students? Here's how they answered:"
A good job after college ... 60%
2. Desire for more knowledge ... 11%
3. To find a mate ... 5%
4. It was "the thing to do" ... 14%
5. The parents wished it ... 8%
6. None of these ... 2%
Many of the students commented that their choice of professions—such as law, education, medicine—required them to go to college. Here are just a few of the comments:
A business sophomore: "To get a degree and a regular army commission."
Four students said they went to college "to play football" and several more said it was to stay out of the army.
A junior from the Pacific coast:
"I want to do something constructive; and in the field of education I can accomplish this."
A junior: Went to college "to attain the goal of entering the medical profession, and to serve this profession to its high standards."
A senior coed in home economics: "Men want a job. Women want a man."
A senior in international relations:
The majority go to college "to reap the fruits of college social life."
In the same poll students were asked to rate the education they have received so far in college. Here are the results:
1. Excellent ... 17 per cent
2. Good ... 57 per cent
3. Fair ... 23 per cent
4. Poor ... 2 per cent
5. No opinion ... 1 per cent
The women appear slightly more satisfied with their education than the men. Seventy-nine per cent of the women say their education has been either excellent or good, as opposed to 70 per cent of the men.
A feeling which seems rather widespread among students is summed up by a coed from a small school in the south: "It's all there to learn, I guess, but I don't study hard enough."
1. I wanted to do as I wished and think for myself instead of being led around by a bunch of sorority sisters.
The University of Buffalo Spectrum recently printed six reasons "Why I Never Joined a Sorority." They are:
2. I had never gone into women's clubs and organizations before I came to college and I didn't want to start.
3. I had never danced with a man in my life and I didn't want to.
4. I didn't like the idea of having to room with the same girl all semester.
5. I didn't fill out a sweater and I didn't look very attractive in a sleeveless, low-cut gown.
UNCLE SAM
WANTS
YOU
Keigler
6. I am a male.
Reds May Hit Southeast Asia
When President Truman and Prime Minister Churchill met in Washington recently they issued a statement in which they said that southeast Asia is the most likely target of the Communists for 1952.
Nothing specific was said in the statement as to just what the two men proposed to do if such an attack came. It merely expressed a broad harmony of views between the policies of the United States and Britain.
Why is 1952 the logical year to invade southeast Asia? If the Korean war spreads to the China mainland, we would have World War III. So it is possible that we will get a truce in Korea.
A Korean truce would allow the Chinese to move to the frontier of southeast Asia. Even without a truce the present lull in fighting in Korea has allowed them to send much of their war industrial output to some 200,000 to 250,000 troops near the north and east Chinese borders of southeast Asia.
This is a year of political fighting in the U.S. We couldn't act in a hurry, especially because of foreign policy fights. Nothing could be done if the Chinese invaded.
The stakes are high for Burma, Thailand, and Indo China. For several years the Communists have been nibbling away. The Reds believe that war on Iran, or Yugoslavia would surely produce World War III, but they believe that war on southeast Asia would be considered by the world as a "local war."
Anthony Eden, while speaking at Columbia university, said that an attack would create a situaiton no less menacing than the Korean war, and that the UN should be just as solid as before in case that happened in southeast Asia.
The lack of clarity of the Truman and Churchill statement may worry the Chinese Reds, perhaps make them believe that a secret Anglo-American agreement has been made.
Local wars or conflicts can be accepted by Communism with no trouble. "Volunteers" would attack in massive numbers and could win in an all-out offensive before the free world could effectively mobilize.
But the statement is not convincing. The West should make a specific statement which would deter invasion of southeast Asia. If it were successful it might save a large and important part of the world from Communism. If it did not work it would give us another commitment. We would have to decrease our commitments to Europe and then perhaps have a danger of invasion in Europe and World War III. —Joe Lastelic.
Knox Dorm A 'New Concept'
The half-million-dollar m e n's residence hall project at Knox college, when completed, will represent a new concept in college dormitories. Corridors and other elements of "institutional atmosphere" have been eliminated, and instead the students will live in eight-man suites consisting of four bedrooms, a homelike living room and bath.
News From Other Campuses
Wages Rise For Engineers
Engineering graduates are receiving starting salaries approximately 16 per cent higher than a year ago, according to a survey conducted by the New York University College of Engineering. The figures compiled indicate that salaries are continuing to rise after a slight increase in 1950, following almost constant levels in 1948 and 1949.
University Daily Kansan
State Getting Richer
Page 3
Monday, February 4, 1952
Mineral Production Hits Top In '51
The annual value of raw minerals produced in Kansas during 1951 has exceeded 400 million dollars for the first time in history, according to the state geological survey at the University.
The figure is about two and one-half times that of 10 years ago, despite the fact that more than million dollars higher than the production value the previous year.
In the three main minerals categories the gains over the previous years were estimated as follows: mineral fuels, 64 per cent; metals, 18 per cent, and nonmetallics, 1 per cent.
Ten of the 23 who passed the examination and 19 of the 37 who were awarded certificates took college work at KU. The KU graduates are: Frank D. Bradley, Lawrence, '50; Edward Downard Jr., Kansas City, '49; Clarence V. Peterson, Kansas City, '36; Robert A. Pfeifer, Salina, '51; Lennard G. Shipley, Salina, '51; Wayne R. Stallard, Lawrence, '48; Leroy A. Steinke, Wichita, '49; Chester C. Walbridge, Wichita, '26; Myron E. Yadon, Topeka, '51.
Fuel oils and gas continued as the leading category. The value of crude oil produced in 1951, estimated at 293 million dollars, was up 6 per cent; natural gas, at 34 millon dollars, at 86 per cent; natural gasoline and liquefied petroleum gasses, at $11,700,000, up about 20 per cent.
The 23 persons will receive CPA certificates after they complete the required amount of experience in public accounting.
Names of 37 persons who have received certificates as Certified Public Accountants and of 23 others who passed all CPA examinations have been released by Howard F. Stettler, secretary of the Kansas board of accountancy.
During the year more than 150 oil and gas pools were discovered.
CPA Certificates To 37 Persons
Certificates have been awarded to James G. Butler, Kansas City, '48; Charles L. Goodpasture, Wichita, '49; Walter H. Hanshaw, Kansas City, '47; Leo F. Henrichs, Denver, '40; Robert C. Hilton, Colby, '49; Charles T. Hornbuckle, Kansas City, '48; Wallace R. Keene, Kansas City, '48; Arthur E. Keller J., Topena, *K*
Eldon L. Lackey, Kansas City, '47; Robert M. L. Leich, Wichita, '46; Jack H. Matthews, Fredonia, '48; Frank J. Petrie, Kansas City, '48; Wallace Wayne Rasmussen, Houston, Texas, '49; Delmar L. Robertson, Joopin, '49; Joe R. Small, Liberal, '49; Albert Glenn Sowders Jr., Wichita, '49; Walter S. Sutton, Kansas City, '38; William E. Ward, Wichita, '36 and Harry Allen Wilber, Kansas City, '49.
KU And Area Free From Flu Epidemic
Four Kansas cities located in the Nichita area have reported 20 to 25 per cent of the high school students ill with flu. According to the report Dr. Canuteson received from the Kansas state board of health, there is no evidence that this "flu epidemic" is more than an epidemic of colds.
No influenza epidemic has broken out on the campus or in this part of the state, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of Watkins hospital, reported today.
"Watkins hospital is prepared to set up stations over the campus to give flu shots if there is any indication a flu epidemic may arise," Dr. Conuteson said.
Albany, N. Y.—(U.P.)-Questions on the germ theory of disease have been dropped from Regents examinations in New York state schools to avoid a conflict with religious principles. It was pointed out that Christian Scientists do not subscribe to the germ theory.
Germ Theorv Out Of Tests
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There was considerable expansion in operating facilities, including refinery expansions and pipe-line construction. Coal production, at an estimated nine million dollars, held its own.
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Rising in importance among the nonmetallics are clay and clay products, valued at seven million dollars, a gain of about 20 per cent. Salt production, also at seven million dollars, was up almost 7 per cent.
Weather conditions, the summer floods in particular, can be blamed for decreased production of sand, gravel, stone and cement, the survey reported.
BLOOD CYLINDER
A 13 per cent increase in the value of zine output and a 22 per cent rise for lead were credited to hikes in price levels.
WELL-READ RED — Communist soldier-driver had time on his hands while his passenger, one of the Red truce negotiators at Panmunjom, was engaged in a session with UN delegates, so he perched on a Jeep and began reading
Production of gypsum, volcanic ash, natural cement and diatomaceous marl, valued at two and one hundred dollars an increase over the previous year.
38 Pharmacy Students Visit Plant In Indianapolis
Thirty-eight University of Kansas pharmacy students utilized their vacation between semesters by traveling to Indianapolis, Ind., where for two days they observed the operations of a pharmaceutical plant.
The group visited the Eli Lilly and Company pharmaceutical research plant where they witnessed the manufacture of penicillin, streptomycin, and gelatin capsules. They made a trip to the biological plant at Greenfield.
The between-semester trip to a pharmaceutical house is an annual event for KU School of Pharmacy junior and seniors.
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Page 4
University, Daily Kansan Monday, February 4, 1952
Kansas Sets New Record In Game Against Iowa State
By JACKIE JONES
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
After suffering from two consecutive defeats, the Kansas Jayhawks came back with their early season scoring power Saturday night to trounce the Iowa State Cyclones 86 to 68.
The Kansas cagers were never in trouble as they got off to an early lead, and continued to pour in the points which led to a new school scoring record in conference play.
The previous high mark in a conference game was a 79 point effort against the K-State Wildcats in 1950. The all time Kansas record is the 90 to 88 win over the Wildcats in this
T
PETER MILLER
B. H. BORN
KENNEY
year's pre-season tournament in Kansas City.
For the first time this season Clyde Lovellette had to take second place honors in the Kansas scoring column. Bob Kenney, who had trouble finding the basket in the last two games, cut the cords for a torrid 24 point burst. His long set shots were mixed with a number of hard driving lay-ups, making him dangerous from any angle.
At the half, Lovellette had four fouls, and in the third quarter picked up his final personal when he collided with an Iowa State player. He played an equivalent of about half of the game, but was able to score 17 points. Against the Oklahoma Aggies he was held to 18, giving him a season total of 411 points and a 25.7 average per game.
B. H. Born took over the center position when Lovellette retired from the game, and did a commendable job. He scored eight points besides blocking several shooting attempts by the Cyclones.
Iowa State (68) G FT F
Alleman 1 0 0
Davis 1 0 0
Hess 2 2 2
Luhring 2 6 5
Van Cleave 0 0 1
Diercks 5 2 5
Russie 1 0 2
Stange 6 6 3
Koch 2 0 0
Byerly 0 0 1
Long 4 2 2
Youngblade 1 0 0
Totals 25 18 21
Kansas (86) G FT F
Alberts 0 0 1
Davenport 2 1 0
Kenney 10 4 1
Lienhard 5 0 2
Squires 0 0 1
Keller 0 0 1
Lovellette 7 3 5
Born 2 4 3
Hoag 2 0 0
Dye 0 0 0
Heitholt 1 1 1
Hougland 3 0 3
Johnson 0 0 0
D. Kelley 1 3 1
Smith 2 0 2
totals
The Score by Quarters
Iowa State 14 18 23 13—68
Kansas 23 19 27 17—86
Free throws missed: Iowa State—Hess, Laubring 2, Van Cleave, Dierckes, Stange, Kansas—Kenney 3, Heiholt 2, Kelley.
Women Become Crack Shots As Rifle Club Gives Training
By JACKIE JONES
It takes a lot of talent to become a crack shot with a rifle, but the members of the University Women's Rifle club are proving that they are not only talented but experts with the guns.
The club, sponsored by the Air Force ROTC, has met 16 universities and colleges throughout the nation in a series of postal matches, and the KU team has won over half of these contests. There will be about 35 more matches before the semester ends.
Sgt. Harold Swartwood of the Air Force serves as coach of the group, and under his direction several of the women have become such accurate shots that now average 98 out of a possible 100 points. Jappy Rau and Marti Combs, College seniors, shoot 99's.
Approximately 30 women are members of the club, which recently reorganized and has applied for membership in the National Rifle association. Jappy Rau, president, said that there are still a limited number of applications available for women who are interested in joining. No knowledge of guns is needed, as instructions will be given by Sgt. Swartwood.
She said, "The purpose of our club is not only to serve as a social activity for the members, but to give women an interest in and a knowledge of weapons."
When a member of the club fires one of the five highest scores during the week, her average is used with the other top four in compiling the total points for the week's matches.
Each club fires on its own range and the scores are then mailed to the other colleges taking part in a match. When any woman has scores high enough to be used in five matches, she is awarded a riffle club letter to be worn on a jacket.
There are six women eligible for letters this year. They are: Jappy Rau, Marti Combs, Barbara Brown, Constance Hyre, Emmalou Burbank and Donna McCall.
In May, the club will hold a party at which time permanent trophies will be awarded to the women with the two highest firing averages and to the woman who has done the most for the club.
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Coach "Phog" Allen used a total of 15 players in the high-scoring contest, giving his regulars frequent chances to rest. The scoring was well divided with 10 of the Kansans registering at least two points. Dean Hammond led them with the Jayhawk substitutes, played their best game of the season.
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The Jayhawk's defense was far behind their offense, and the Iowa State quintet found many openings for easy set shots. Jim Stange, 6-foot, 7-inch Cyclone forward connected for 18 points. He was second to Kenney in total scoring.
The Kansas scoring attack was well spread over the four quarters. At the end of the first period they led 23 to 14, at the half it was 42 to 32, and 69 to 55 as the final quarter began.
The Jayhawk victory gives Kansas a 4-1 record in conference play, and them second behind the K-State Wildcats who have a 5-0 record.
Mangrum, who hit his 1951 stride only once in the first month of the tour with his victory in last week's Phoenix open, said he would take "a月ment or so" for rest and "very little golf." He has complained in recent weeks that he wasn't "feeling so hot, physically or golfwise."
And with Lloyd Mangrum, the 1951 "Mr. Money Bats" with more than $26,000 in his jeans for last year's efforts, headed back to his wintertime Los Angeles home, the tour had one less "old timer" to contend with.
Williams, who coppe the Tucson event here yesterday with a 72-hole six-under par 274, meanwhile, will
Tucson, Ariz. —(U.P.) The youngsters took over golf's annual winter tour today in a "youth must be served" movement as slender Henry Williams Jr., became the third newcomer to take the big money in the first five 1952 tournaments.
Youth Take On Winter Golf
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lead the pack of lean and hunger movements on to El Paso for the $10,000 El Paso open. He finished two strokes ahead of Middlecoff, while Skee Riegel, the former amateur champ turned pro, finished third in the wind-buffeted Tucson tourney with a 278.
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The Kutztown, Pa., pro joined Tommy Bolt, Durham, N.C. winner of the $15,000 Los Angeles open, and Ted Kroll, New Hartford, N.Y. victor at San Diego, in the youth parade. Only Mangrum at Phoenix and Jimmy Demaret in the Bing Crosby pro-amateur at Pebble Beach, Calif, have carried the veteran's banner successfully.
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KU To Meet Colorado In Important Ball Game
The Colorado Buffaloes will move into Hoch auditorium tonight to face Coach "Phog" Allen's Jayhawks in a Big Seven basketball tilt which could be quite important to the Kansas quintet. Tip-off time is 7:35.
Saturday night the Kansas State Wildcats defeated the Buffs, to maintain a 5-0 record in conference play. The Jawhaws must do the same or fall far behind their Kansas cousins in the race for the conference crown.
Coach H. B. (Bebe) Lee's squad now rests in the cellar position in the league with a 1-4 record, but they could be troublesome if the Kansas team should be let down after their fast pace of Saturday night.
Against Iowa State, the Jayhawks set a new school scoring record of 86 points for a conference game. the Kansans now have a 4-1 record in the Big Seven this season. This puts them in second place behind the undefeated Wildcats.
The Buffs boast several talented players, but more than any other Big Seven school they suffered from graduation last June.
Only four lettermen returned to the team, and Coach Lee has had one of the greatest rebuilding problems in the conference. His best all-around player is Frank Gompert, a 6-foot, 4-inch junior from Winnetka, Ill.
The other returning lettermen are John Amaya, a long-armed jumping jack who's good on the boards despite his little 5-foot, 10-inch size, Don Bramby and Kenney Koon.
Gompert is usually the spark of the Buff squad, and his quick shooting and excellent rebounding could cause trouble for the Jayhawk defense.
The Colorado squad is fast, but is at a great disadvantage against the tall Kansas opponents. Frank Gompert is the highest Buff and the others range on down to the size of Amaya.
The main Buffalo hope will lie in being able to get past the Jayhawk
Monday, February 4, 1952 University Daily Kanson Page 5
Former Stars Best At Tennis
By OSCAR FRALEY UP Sports Writer
New York—(U.P.)–From all the fuss the men tennis players are kicking up you'd think they were the greatest in court history, but the greatest in crop rank on all-time first 10 selected by an americ Mercer Beasley.
Beasley, who in more than three decades as a tennis coach has produced such champions as Ellsworth Vines, Frankie Parker, Wilmer Allison, Pancho Segura and Doris Hart, on the other hand ranks three of the current women stars among the all-time 10 best.
Placed at the top of their respective fields by the man who has seen them all are big Bill Tilden and Mrs. Helen Wills Moody. Of the present day stringed paddle corps, Beaulayanks Jacket fourth and Australian Frank. Sedgman 10th among the men with the women listing Mrs. Margaret Osborne Du Pont seventh. Miss Hart eighth and Louise Brough 10th.
His all-time first 10 for the men are: 1, Tilden; 2, Nehri Cochet, France; 3, Jean Rene Lacoste, France; 4, Kramer; 5, Fred Perry, England; 6, Little Bill Johnston; 7, Vines; 8, Don Budge; 9, Vincent Richard, and 10, Sedgman.
For women, he lists: 1, Mrs.
Moody; 2, Alice Marble; 3, Suzanne
Lenglen, France; 4, Mrs. Molla B.
Mollary; 5, Helen Jacobs; 6, Mrs.
Pauline Betz Addie; 7, Mrs. Du
Pont; 8, Miss Hart; 9, Dorothy Round
of Great Britain, and 10, Miss
Brough.
"Tilden at his best would be the top player of any era," Beasley says of the man who won eight U.S. and three Wimbledon titles.
"And while women's tennis has made gigantic strides since World War I. I believe that the same holds true of 'Queen Helen,' he compliments the "Little Miss Pokerface" who won seven U.S. titles and eight Wimbledon crowns.
defense which has not shown with brilliance this season.
Saturday night the Iowa State Cyclones found many opportunities for good set shots, and unless Kansas improves considerably the opposing teams will continue to register many important points.
New York—(U.P.)-All of the nation's top 10 college basketball teams see action this week in a blue-ribbon program kicked off tonight by six games of national significance.
Tough Games Face Colleges In Week's Action
The game of the week—and perhaps the game of the year as far as the big 10 is concerned—will be played Saturday night when Illinois, top-ranked by the United Press Coaches board, plays eighth-ranked Iowa.
Both of the two remaining major unbeaten teams—Duquesne and St. Bonaventure—are slated for major tests. Duquesne, with the year’s top winning streak of 14, tackles a tartar in LaSalle, the Nation's No. 18 team, tonight. And St. Bonnie, with 13 straight, plays John Carroll tonight and Cincinnati on Saturday.
Second-ranked Kentucky faces Tulane in a Southeastern Conference game; fourth-ranked Kansas takes on Colorado, slaughtered, 92-40, by Kansas State Saturday night; fifth-ranked St. Louis plays Drake and Iowa meets Butler in the other big games tonight.
Kentucky will be bidding for its 18th triumph in 20 games after coming from behind seven times to beat Notre Dame, 71-66. Saturday night while Kansas will be seeking to duplicate Kansas State's margin of victory over hapless Colorado. St. Louis just managed to edge out Wichita, 64-63, in a Missouri Valley conference game Saturday night and could be in for trouble while Iowa, idle Saturday, could run into an upset if it tries to look beyond tonight's game to next Saturday's meeting with Illinois.
Illinois and Kentucky, ranked 1-2 in the nation, barely struggled past their foes Saturday while Duquesne and St. Bonaventure won easily.
Illinois beat Ohio State, 66-62,
after over-coming an 11-point deficit,
for its 13th win in 14 games.
A third-quarter supr gained the victory for Kentucky over a Notre Dame squad hampered by the loss of three guards declared ineligible because of scholastic difficulties just before game-time.
Meanwhile, Duquesne rolled over Westminster, 8160, and St. Bonaventure came through with a truly impressive 79-48 triumph over Loyola of Chicago.
Miami, Fla. — (U.P.)— Kid Gavilan, the Cuban hawk, defends his weltweight championship against Bobby Dykes at Miami stadium tonight in the first mixed bout in Florida sports history but the pigmentation piligrimage is the least part of the attendant confusion.
This is a bout with more facets than the Kinohiner diamond and, just to give you a quick idea, here are some of them:
Bobby Dykes Meets Cuban
Gavilan's managers took the Florida boxing rules back to Cuba to have them interpreted into Spanish just so they wouldn't be any mixup.
They are selling tickets to this rhumba in Havana.
Dykes' chief hope for victory is a looping right hand which he starts throwing from just west of Camaguay.
Gavilan to win friends and influence people—among the judges—will depend on his bolo. This is a flashy number supposedly developed cutting sugar cane but which looks more like a conga line creation.
The Kansas State Wildcats lead the Big Seven conference basketball race with a 5-0 record after defeating the Colorado Bucks Saturday night.
Kansas State Tops Big Seven
The Kansas Jayhawks are right on the heels of the Wildcats with a 4-1 record in the set, new school scoring record in the set, Iowa State 86 to 68 Saturday.
The Standings of the Teams
Conference
| | W | L | Pct. | Pts. | Op. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 14 | 2 | .875 | 1118 | 937 |
| K-State | 14 | 3 | .824 | 1291 | 1005 |
| Missouri | 14 | 7 | .588 | 1928 | 864 |
| Iowa State | 7 | 6 | .538 | 816 | 850 |
| Nebraska | 5 | 12 | .294 | 1066 | 1096 |
| Colorado | 4 | 11 | .267 | 835 | 932 |
| Okla. | 4 | 11 | .267 | 835 | 900 |
W L Pct. Pts. Op.
K-State ... 5 0 1.000 395 252
Kansas ... 4 1 800 350 322
Oklahoma ... 2 2 500 210 323
Iowa State ... 2 3 400 313 356
Missouri ... 2 3 400 263 360
Nebraska ... 1 4 200 292 339
Colorado ... 1 4 200 261 312
This Week's Games
Tonight Colorado vs. Kansas; Iowa State vs. Oklahoma at Norman. Kentucky vs. Kansas State vs. Missouri at Columbia. Oklahoma vs. Nebraska at Lincoln.
With all these angles playing a part in the ante-bellum braggadocio, the fact is being ignored in the 11 to 5 odds favoring the keed that this might be a pretty fancy fist fight. The keed is fleet and flashy but, despite his last-time-out kayo of Walter Cartier, he can't ordinarily knock off your Aunt Sara's hat.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, February 4, 1952
Katharine Cornell's Current Hit Marks 21 Years Of Producing
New York—(U.P.)—Katharine Cornell "came of age" as an actress-
manager this week and found herself with her biggest hit since her
first effort as a producer. ◇
Twenty-one years ago on Jan. 29 the star appeared for the first time as Elizabeth Barrett in "The Barretts of Wimpole Street." That was in Cleveland and it was the first time she had produced a play. She has worked for herself ever since.
"Oddly enough, I bought the American rights to 'The Barretts' without any thought of appearing in it myself," Miss Cornell said in her dressing room at the National theater as she was preparing for a performance in "The Constant Wife."
"I was on a ship en route from New York to California for a vacation and I had some scripts with me, 'The Barretts' was one of them and as soon as I read it I began sending cables to secure the rights.
"I was thinking of the play only in terms of something my husband, Guthrie McClintick, might like to direct and produce. I gave scarcely any thought to Elizabeth as a character I might want to or could play. My husband and friends talked me into it."
Miss Cornell's current success with Somerset Maughan's 25-year-old "The Constant Wife," which originally served Ethel Barrymore, also came about without much design.
"The people who run the annual summer festival in Central City, Colo., asked me to appear last year in anything I might want to do." Miss Cornell explained. "Well, I had been wanting to do comedy for some time and Maugham's play had been suggested to me by several persons.
"When I was able to get the people I wanted we decided to go ahead with it for the three weeks at Central City. The business really surprised everyone and a fourth week was added. By that time we realized that there might be several public games old play, so we reassembled practically the same cast a few months later and brought it here."
Miss Cornell said that playing Juliet was probably her "most amazing experience" in the theater. Although she didn't necessarily reward the role as her favorite. She said she actually couldn't say which of her many roles she liked best.
"I never go to see others play tables in which I have appeared," he said. "If I saw them doing things I didn't do I would be furious for not having thought of them myself, and if they didn't do things I did I would think they were stupid for not doing them."
The theater has shrunk considerably since Miss Cornell got her start 35 years ago, but she said she didn't think she should feel too sorry for youngsters trying to break in today.
"It's true that we no longer have rock companies on every hand for the youngsters to learn their trade," he said, "but I've found that nothing stops those who are really interested
Miss Owen Engaged To Thomas Lovitt
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore C. Owen, Emporia, announce the engagement of their daughter, Althea Lucile, to Thomas Charles Lovitt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Lovitt, Burton.
from getting together in groups and working out their problems.
Both Miss Owen and Mr. Lovitt are education seniors. Miss Owen is a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority, and Mr. Lovitt is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
Advertising Sorority To Initiate Thursday
Edna Marie Dunn, fashion illustrator for the Kansas City Star, will become an honor initiate of Gamma Alpha Chi at the professional advertising sorority's initiation and honor's day banquet Thursday evening.
The ceremonies will be held at the Castle Tea room. Miss Dunn will deliver the after-dinner speech. Mrs Richard G. Zimmerman of Lawrence will also be honorarily initiated.
An award will be presented to the most outstanding girl in the advertising department. She will be selected by a committee consisting of Dean Burton W. Marvin of the School of Journalism; Robert W. Doores, journalism instructor and sponsor of the group, and Pat Brown, president of Gamma Alpha Chi.
Betty Bull is chairman of the invitations committee; Lucinda Stevens is in charge of decorations; Dorothy Hedrick is chairman of the speakers committee, and Kay Peters is in charge of publicity.
Business Organization Offers Fellowship
A $1,500 fellowship for a woman graduate student is being offered by the South Central Region of the American Federation of Soroptimist clubs, an international organization of executive business and professional women.
The fellowship is intended for a woman student undertaking graduate or professional work in preparation for public service. All applicants are expected to be holders of baccalaureate degrees and prospective candidates for a graduate degree.
The selection of the candidate will be based on previous academic record, probability of success in graduate or professional study and personal qualifications.
Those interested should inquire in the Scholarship office, 220 Strong hall about applications.
Hollywood Designer Says Today's Woman Overdresses In Comparison To Flappers
Hollywood—(U.P.) Juel Park, who designs high-priced piercing, believes the American Women's Institute must have a short memory if it thinks women of today run around in a state of "shocking exposure."
"Nonsense!" snorted Miss Park who concocts frothy negliges, nightgowns and unmentionables for each mentionables as Joan Craword, Claudette Colbert, Barbara Stanwyck, Ginger Rogers and Ann Baxter.
The institute arrived at its conclusion after a survey of women's lashions.
"I can't imagine what women were covered—or was it uncovered?—by this survey," she said. "For myself, I can't remember when women have been better, or more completely, dressed."
She recalled that it was 1929 when she first opened her underwear store in Beverly Hills.
"Now, that was a day when the words 'shocking exposure' really meant something," she said. "Dresses barely reached from shoulder to knee. Necklines frequently plunged
She remembered that a girl was apt to get a reputation for bundling up if she wore so much as a simple chemise underneath.
"The average dress, for day or evening, was sleeveless low-necked, collarless and barely knee-length," she said. "You could cut it from two yards of fabric and still have left-over.
"Today's woman is more completely dressed at almost any hour than were her predecessors. A woman used to think one dressing gown would do for all her leisure hours. Now she has a whole wardrobe of negligees, robes, and hostess robes."
clear to the waistline. And remember where waistlines were then?"
Miss Park, who naturally is happy about such a trend, first began to suspect the American woman is over-dressing just a teenys bit when a Texas customer ordered a robe of metallic gold cloth to wear over her swimming suit on the way to her private pool. She said her husband liked her to look her best at all times.
Mr. and Mrs. George G. Moses, Junction City, announce the engagement of their daughter, Janice, to Mr. Rush Scott, son of Mrs. Hallie Scott, Sullivan, mo.
Miss Moses To Wed MU Graduate
Miss Moses is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University in January. Mr. Scott received a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics from the University of Missouri in 1950. He is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
Official Bulletin
Quill club, 7 p.m. Wednesday,
Pine room, Memorial Union.
Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Myers hall.
Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 111 Strong.
ASTE, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Fowler shops.
International club meeting. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Pine Room, Memorial Union. Dr. Sandelius, speaker, "Constitutional Government and World Crisis." Foreign and American graduate students invited.
Student Union Board meeting, 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, East room, Memorial Union.
Campus Affairs committee, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 222 Strong.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira mardi 5 fevrier a sept heures et demie dans la salle 113 Strong.
IFC important meeting, 9 tonight. 206 Strong. All representatives must be present.
Intramural Bridge tournament
Feb. 12, 13, 14, 7:15 p.m., Recreation room, Memorial Union. Register SUA office by Monday noon, enter as a team, entry fee 50c per team.
All students welcome.
Upstream society meeting, 7:30 tonight. Hawk's Nest.
J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test
**POOR PAUl** was having a fowl time. Even his best gal didn't give a hoot for him. "Wise she hate me so?" he asked his roommate. "Simple, you stiffly old bird—because your hair's always ruffled up! Better try Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic. It's non-alcoholic. Contains soothing Lanolin. And does tree things: Relieves annoying dryness. Removes loose, ugly dandruff. Grooms hair neatly and naturally all day long. (Even limb-ers up your scalp. And helps you pass the Finger-Nail Nest-er, Test!) Paul got Wildroot Cream-Oil and now he's a 'owling success. So why don't you take a taxi-dermist to any drug or toilet goods counter to get a bottle or tube of Wildroot Cream-Oil. It's your hair's best friend! And ask for it at your barber shop. Then there's no talon how the chick's go for you."
- of 131 So. Harris Hill Rd., Williamstille, N.Y.
Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.
WILDBOOT
CREAM-OIL
MASK
ALONG THE WAY
BUTTON-PUSHABLE
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WILDROOT CREAM-OIL
Hair Tools
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
Admission Free Film Showing-Group Discussion Hawk's Nest-Feb.6-7:30 p.m. EUROPE 1952
All those interested in traveling through Europe this summer are invited to attend a special film showing and discussion in the Hawk's Nest, balcony, February 6th, at 7:30 p.m. Free coke and coffee. Admission free.
Don't delay in making your summer travel plans definite. Space.on sailings and flights to Europe are extremely limited. Make reservations promptly. For descriptive literature on tours and places to go, phone 3661 or see—
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
1015 Massachusetts
Mrs. Lois Odaffer
Phone 3661 Mr. Joe Brown
ers.
Monday, February 4, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page
Radio Schedule
The week's schedule of programs to be heard on KFKU, University radio station, found at 1250 on the radio dial.
Mondav
Flying Carpet 2:30 p.m.
"Le Cid." Spanish Legend
Broadway Rhapsody ... 2:45 p.m.
Old favorites in music from show
biodiversity
Great Symphonies ... 7 p.m.
Dvorak's Symphony No. 5 from
the New World Symphony
Art by Radio ... 2:30 p.m.
Lesson in Painting by Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education.
Wednesday
KU Cavalcade of Hits ... 7 p.m
The top tunes of the week on
Mt. Oread
Fairy Footprints ... 2:30 p.m.
New program of Kansas history
for grade school students "On
A Missouri Hilltop"
KU in the News ... 2:45 p.m.
Tom Yoe reporting the University news of the week.
Concert Hall 7 p.m
First Piano Quartet Maggie
Teyte, Jascha Heifetz, William
Primrose and Tomas Hayward
Thursdav
Adventures in Music Land...2:30 p.m.
"Hats off, gentlemen—a genius:
Chopin"
Friday
Brainbusters 7 p.n.
Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, Max Dresden,
associate professor of physics,
and Charles Oldfather, assistant professor of law.
Storybook Train ... 2:30 p.m.
"Henry's Lincoln"
Jerald Hamilton at the Console
Museum of Art Organ ... 2:45 p.m.
Jerald Hamilton, at the console.
Chamber Music .. 7 pm
DeBussy's "Quartet in G minor"
Nurse At Watkins Hospital Leaves For San Francisco
Miss Prisla Muller, visiting nurse, from Zurich, Switzerland who has been at Watkins hospital the past master, has moved to San Francisco.
Miss Muller worked in England during the blitz. She says that nursing in America is much easier than in Europe.
"We have to work long hours in my country and the work is very hard." she said.
In Korea, the ground position of United Nations forces in the 18-months-old fighting war improved from an adverse state at the year's start. Truce talks, carried on falteringly through the second half of the year, produced a 150-mile potential truce line along the ground front as of Nov. 27.
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U. 376
Classified Advertising Rates
Guerrilla and terrorist tactics were effectively employed in 1951 by Communist minorities in the Far East-notably in Indochina, the Philippines, and Malaya. The shooting
Internal Changes Are Many In Pacific Area During 1951
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less ___ 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ___ 1c 2c 3c
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
Strategically related to this treaty, which fixes no specific reparations or limit on Japanese rearming, are defense agreements signed virtually at the same time. One, between the United States and Japan, provides for U. S. forces to remain in Japan after the treaty takes effect. A second, between the United States and the Philippines, and a third, among the United States, Australia, and New Zealand, complete a long anti-Communist defense are in the western Pacific.
RIDERS WANTED: Mondays and Fridays. Kansas City Plaza district or district of Leaf Lawrence 4:50 p.m. from Military building; also part-time passengers for weekends. See Kuster, west door for building at 4:50 Monday to Fridays.
4-6-8
RIDERS: From Kansas City, Mo., 63rd and Brookside, to University, Monday. Wednesday, Friday, 6:30 a.m. Rheva Spitcausky, Jackson 1936. 2-6
The year 1951 has witnessed its full share of internal changes in governments and of "security agreements" in the Pacific area.
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Leave K.C. 7-30 a.m.
Leave KU 5-30 p.m. Highway 10.
Call Bob Breedlove, Indep. 8552 after 8:00
p.m.
COMMUTING: 8-dally from K.C., Kan.
Car pool or riders wanted. Call Fa.*
24-
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether in person or by telephone. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3861, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. **tf**
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
passage not only for European travel
or Canada. Call the National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
BUSINESS SERVICE
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop. 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Bower, 838 Lapt. 49. upstairs. Ph. 775J.
Diplomats and negotiators toiled longer and in greater number than ever before in this first year of the second half of the 20th century, but without immediate effect in reducing tensions.
TYING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tf
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these types experience. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Pf
Japan, 10 years after Pearl Harbor, stands at the threshold of restored sovereignty by virtue of the peace treaty signed Sept. 8 at San Francisco by 48 non-Communist nations. Ratified Nov. 20 by the Japanese Government, the treaty takes effect
only after it has been officially ratified by the United States, and six other Allied participants in the Pacific war.
In Thailand's capital, Bangkok (Krung Thep), military leaders apparently associated with the premier seized the government late in November, effecting a constitutional change. The young king, returning from a long stay in Switzerland, expressed willingness to cooperate. An early election is planned to seat a non-military half of the National Assembly.
war that began in Indochina at the close of World War II found French-supported Viet Nam forces regaining some northern rice-bowl ground from Communist Vietnam, but under the explosive threat of Chinese Red intervention. British efforts to retake Kiev have continued to be hampered by small bands of snipers, at work since 1948.
Northwestward in Tibet, the 1950 invaders from Red China appeared to be entrenched. Peiping in May announced that a 17-point signed agreement amounted to a "peaceful liberation" of Tibet's three million inhabitants.
Nepal, on Tibet's southern border,
late in 1951 achieved a historic reform.
Ending a 104-year dual monarchy whereby hereditary prime ministers have authority over governments. Himalayan kingdom, Nepali's titular king became king in fact by appointing a commoner as his prime minister.
Flagging efforts to mediate the continuing dispute that has kept the State of Jammu and Kashmir in contention between Hindu India and Moslem Pakistan were revived late in the year under UN direction. The plan of the UN-appointed American mediator is to arrange a demilitarization, if possible, to be followed by an impartially conducted statewide plebiscite to show the will of the people.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment available for efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
STUDYINGLY late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. **tf**
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am. until midnight. **tf**
TYPING: Experience in theses, term papers, miscellaneous typing, and stenolic cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1982W, 1915 Tennessee. tf
GRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, cafes, home-made pies and air-conditioned rooms for customers Air-conditioned. Open. am. a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt.
FOR SALE
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything you need, our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
RENTAL TYPEWRITERS! Both new and used manuscripts can be purchased per week or $3.50 per month. The easy way to better, neater papers. One at the Student Union Book Store.
INDEX your vocabulary and language books with the new Superior Cloth tabs. A set from A to Z for just 10c. Student Union Book Store. 8
Make this your HEADQUARTERS for College Outline Series, Schaum's Outlines, and other study aids. Student Union Book Store. 8
STILL NO INCREASE in price on 140 sheet pad of yellow second sheets. Only 25c at your Student Union Book Store. 8
SPECIAL RATES for students on Time Life, Fortune, and Newsweek Magazines We take subscriptions to all magazines a rebate too! Student Uni Book Store.
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands priced to clear. Awaken to music with these values at F. B. Goodrich, 929 Mass. B-2-13
TRAILER HOUSE, 25 feet, 1947, in excellent condition. Reduced to sell immediately. 929 Conn. Phone 2568M. 2-4
FOR RENT
ONE LARGE room with two single beds
for two quiet boys, 124 La. 2-5
AT 707 WEST 12th. Double room, with twin beds for girls. Also will serve homecooked meals to boys. Call 964. 2-7
DOUBLE ROOM with single beds. Ph 2565M, 1320 Ohio. 2-2
BEDROOM AND study suite for two
baths. Private bath, entrance. Linens
furnished. Basement. $15 a month. Call
2798M. 2-4
VERY DESIREABLE room for student or employed woman. 1232 La. Phone
STUDY AND bedroom suite. . .
THE student. Quel surroundings. Call 312T4M
STUDY AND bedroom suite. Private
Comfort Conventees!
JAXHAWER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Edmond O'Brien
Yvonne De Carlo
NOW
"Silver City"
(Color by Technicolor)
1
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Tonite thru Tuesday BOMBA The Jungle Boy
.
"Elephant Stampede"
and--
"THE MAGIC FACE"
LARGE, NICELY furnished room in quiet, modern home, convenient to KU town. To student or employed young man. No smoking. $20 a month. 127. 2-4
LARGE COMFORTABLE rooms for boys at reasonable rates; excellent location on bus line. Phone 1871R. 2-6
ROOM FOR one or two boys. Reasonable and clean. Call 14738.
2-4
ROOMS FOR MEN, super plain single beds. Can take single, double, or triple in room. Steam heat, large rooms, quiet surroundings on the Hill, 1105 Lau. 2-4
SINGLE ROOM, clean and quiet location, close to hill. Only one other room; close to bath, furnace heat. 407 West 13th. 2-5
ROOMS FOR UPPER classmen and graduate students. Quiet, comfortable single rooms, close to campus. For second semester. 1131 Ohio. Phone 1754W.
VACANCY for boys near campus. 1218
Mississippi. Phone 514. 2-5
TRAILERS FOR RENT, two wheel and four wheels. Have some good used trailers for sale; also a 1938 Ford two-door truck. Hatchell T rental trailer, 2-15 North 3rd.
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
for spring semester. $12 each a month.
1222 Miss. Phone 495. tt
ROOMS, double and single. See at 1312
Ohio. 8
APARTMENT for rent. Three rooms, private bath, $60 a month; utilities paid.
1339 Ohio. 6
ROOMS for boys, single or double. $15 a month. 1339 Ohio. 6
BOARDERS WANTED! Good food, home cooked! Great companionship at the Nu SigmaNu house. Very informal.Call 366 today for information. 8
LOST
BLACK, GOLD TOP. Parker 15 pen. His sentimental value. Name inscribed, Charles H. Dick. Call 3445. Liberal reward. 6
WOMAN'S wrist watch found in Memorial Union building. Will owner please write identification to Box 5, University Daily Kansan? 2-5
MAN'S light-weight top coat. Found in Strong hall. Owner may identify and pay for this ad. Call the Karsan, KU 376. 2-6
COLLEGE SENIOR want to buy or rent good trumpet in good condition* for use in private lessons. Private Lessons Excellent care, guaranteed. Murray at 1713 between 6 and 7 p.m. 2-6
MISCELLANEOUS
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
ers buyers. Buyers. W. J. Vance.
Almen, 3110R.
THE MARKET Research Department of Procter and Gamble has several traveling positions open for young women college graduates to conduct consumer education in simple arithmetic; drivers license; a expenses paid plus salary; training per semester in Virginia. Weiss, Procter & Gamble Gwynne Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. 2-
N-O-W !
WESTWARD THE WOMEN
Robert TAYLOR Denise DARGEL
Hope EMERSON John McINTIRE
M.G. PIGEON
Also Movietone News
N-E-X-T !
FLAME OF ARABY TECHNICOLOR Maureen O'HARA jeff CHANDLER
Watch For . . .
James Stewart
"Bend of The River"
Granada
- LAST TIMES TONITE -
Features At: 7:39-9:38
Linda Darnell Stephen McNally Gigi Perreau "The Lady Pays Off"
STARTS TOMORROW
"The Lady Pays Off"
HERE'S A PICTURE THAT PULLS NO PUNCHES! NOT FOR SQUEAMISH PERSONS . . . A DRAMATIC THUNDERBOLT RIPPED OUT OF THE CROOKED FIGHT RACKET . . . YET WITH A TENDER LOVE STORY OF THE GIRL WHO BEGGED HIM TO QUIT!!
DON'T MISS THIS ONE!
HARD-HITTING EXPOSE OF THE CROOKED FIGHT RACKET!
Robert Audrey
RYAN · TOTTER
THE SET-UP
George ALAN Wailace
TOBIAS·BAXTER·FORD
Color Cartoon and Late News
I
- STARTS FRIDAY •
Out of The Pages Of The Best Seller Comes The Biggest Adventure Of Our Times!
Photographed by the men who love it.
KON-TIKI
Told by THOR HEYERDAHL
writer of the best-selling book.
Patee PHONE 131
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, February 4, 1952
News Roundup
Arab Asiatic Bloc To Bring Tunisia Problem To UN
Paris—(U.P.)The 15-nation Arab-Asiatic bloc said today it would bring the festering Tunisian situation before the United Nations Security council.
Syrian delegate to the UN Ahmad Shukairy announced the decision to raise in the Security Council the dispute between the French government and Tunisian nationalists which has resulted in 70 deaths in riots since Jan.16.
Despite the representations, he said, "The situation in Tunisia continues to deteriorate and has in fact been aggravated."
Shukaira noted that the Arab-Asia bloc had made representations to the presidents of the General Assembly and the Security Council on the "grave situation" in Tunisia without effect.
It was assumed that the complaint would demand Security Council action on the ground that the Tunisian dispute is a threat to international peace.
Dockmen Return
Chicago—(U.P.)-AFL dockmen returned to work today at Chicago's 650 freight docks after accepting a 31-cent hourly wage boost from major midwestern shipping firms.
Acceptance of the increase Sunday night ended a three-day strike which had tied up critical freight shipments throughout the Midwest.
The hourly wage increase is to be reflected in a shortened work week. The average rate for 40 hours work which jumps their hourly rate from $1.55 to $1.86.
Wage stabilization laws permit only 18 cents of the increase without special approval.
Crew Rescued
Ocracoke, N.C.—(U.P.)—Crewmembers of the motorship Miget, grounded and breaking up in a howling Atlantic storm, rode a lifeboat through a pounding surf to a safe landing on tiny Portsmouth island near here today.
The 26-member crew abandoned the stricken vessel at 2:55 am. on order of skipper Dudolgh Tanden, of Melford, N.J., after the coast guard made several futile attempts to reach the vessel which had been driven aground by a freak storm.
Armistice Closer
Pamunjum, Korea—(U.P.)—Allied and Communist truce negotiators have "moved closer to an armistice ... within the foreseeable future" in the last few days, the chief United Nations command spokesman said today.
In today's talks the true delegates neared final agreement on an exchange of war prisoners.
They also arranged a plenary session of the full truce delegations for 7 p.m. Tuesday CST, to start discussion of the final item on the armistice program — recommendations to be made to the belligent governments for a final peace settlement.
Harold Ickes Dies
Washington—(U.P.)—Harold L Ickes received in death today what he never asked and seldom got in life —a lot of kind words.
The "old curmudgeon," who was Secretary of the Interior for 13 years, died last night (at 6:25 p.m. EST) in emergency hospital. He had been suffering from arthritis for 77-year-old heart finally gave out.
President Truman, who once felt the last of Ickes' sharp tongue, was one of the first to pay tribute to the outspoken New Dealer who was known, in admiration rather than irony, as "Honest Harold."
"Although he was often irascible and could be intolerant of the opinions of others," Mr. Truman said, "his sharpest critics never doubted hins integrity . . . he was a true patriot and a many-sided citizen whose passing leaves a void in our national life not easily filled."
McCarthy Replies
Washington—(U.P.)-Sen. Joseph R McCarthy challenged President Truman today to show where he misquoted a "single word" of what he said were FBI reports about presidential assistant. Philleo Nash.
In a recent speech, McCarthy read to the Senate what purported to be FBI reports accusing Nash of having had Communist connections. Nash denounced the charge as a "contemptible lie."
At his press conference last week Mr. Truman denounced McCarthy as a pathological character assassin.
In a telegram to Mr. Truman Sunday night, McCarthy told the President "merely to call me names . . . not to answer question" to his senate speech.
KC Expert Teaching Oriental Art Course
Laurence Sickman, vice-director of the William Rockhill Nelsong Gallery in Kirkwood City), is teachin on a course in Other Art. On Thursdays in the Museum of Art.
Mr. Sickman is regarded as the most distinguished authority on Chinese art in America, Prof. John Mason, director of the museum said.
This is the first time that cooperation of this sort has taken place between the Nelson gallery and the Museum of Art.
Interviews
Representatives of various companies will interview June and August graduates of the School of Nursing and Architecture this week.
Tuesday: Department of Navy, bureau of ordinance, Washington, D.C.
Wednesday: Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing company.
曼特的 Biscuit company, Omaha. All interested students should sign the schedule in Dean Carr's office. Marvin hall.
Thursday: Mr. R. J. Geppert of Merchant's Biscuit company, Omaka
'Biggest Man In Radio'
By WILLIAM F. STANFILL
'Hillbilly Clyde Lovellette' Radio Show Heard Over WREN On Saturdays
"Hillbilly Clyde Lovellette" KU All-American, became the biggest man in radio" at 7 p.m. Saturday when he took to the air waves of radio station WREN in the first of his regularly scheduled Saturday night disc jockey shows.
The program, the Hillbilly Clyde show which describes Lovette as a hi-fi showman in radio*, is a hip-hop recordings book featuring popular hillbilly recordings.
The show was originated by Lo-vellette and Clark Akers, a journalism senior. All script for the show is written by Akers. The program is sponsored by a Topeka sports store.
The idea for the show came to Lovellette and Akers when they received a class assignment in radio speaking. Students of the class were required to originate a 15-minute sports or disc jockey variety show.
A 15-minute Hilbilly Clyde show was worked up for the class. Everyone thought the show was good so the two expanded it to 30 minutes. When that version was smoothed out Lovellette made a tape recording of the show.
Akers, who is in the advertising sequence of journalism, said writing the commercials and script for the show might give him an opportunity to work directly into radio advertising after he is graduated.
Max Falkenstein, WREN sports announcer, listened to the tape recording and thought it was good enough to rate a sponsor. Soon after the audition Lovellette and Akers had one.
The Skyline club, night time hangout of KU students, was raided by the sheriff Saturday night. The night spot has been temporarily closed pending investigation. The raid followed a number of complaints of a disturbance from patrons, passersby and residents of the area. No students were arrested.
Skyline Closed Following Raid
They receive no compensation for writing or producing the show. Lo-vellette said that he plans to go into radio work after graduation and that the experience the show will provide for him will probably help him considerably.
After the game
9
REFRESH YOURSELF
at the
HAWK'S NEST COFFEE - ROLLS - SANDWICHES FRENCH FRIES-FOUNTAIN ORDERS CANDY-CIGARETTES
WREN
CLYDE MAKES RADIO DEBUT—Max Falkenstien, Topeka sports announcer, and Clyde Lovellette, KU basketball star, get a laugh out of "Fillbilly Clyde's" stories during the transcription of Lovellette's first disc jacket show on station WREN, every Saturday at 7 p.m.
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STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
Kansas State Historical Society
KU Polio Contributions Total $430
Contributions to the University polio drive today totaled $430, slightly less than the entire total in previous years.
M. C. Slough, associate professor and chairman of the drive, believes many people have forgotten to send in their contributions.
The drive, which began Jan. 16,
includes faculty members and university employees. Students are not
asked to contribute to the fund if they donated to the Campus Chest last semester.
Cash or checks should be sent to 204 Green hall. Mr. Slough asks that contributors make all checks payable to the National Foundation of Infantile Paralysis. The deadline for the drive is Tuesday, Feb. 12.
Only one-eighth of the persons solicited have given money to the fund, he said. It is distressing that so few people have contributed to the fund since the coming summer may be a critical polio season in Douglas county, he added.
Health records show that seasons of severe polio epidemics tend to run in three-year cycles.
Two of the worst years were 1946 and 1949. Although it is a prediction only, 1952 will be a critical year also if the epidemic cycles continue, Mr. Slough said.
The Douglas County Board
The cost of treatment for polio victims varies with the individuals but one case in Lawrence cost $2,500 last year and some cases cost as much as $10,000.
Daily Kansan
49th Year
I
English Comedy To Open Feb. 27
"The Lady's Not for Burning," a new comedy by Christopher Fry, will be presented Feb. 27, 28, 29, and March 1, in Fraser theater.
The play is the third major dramatic production of the year and will be directed by Tom Rea, instructor in speech.
Harold Harvey, instructor in speech, has designed and built a miniature model of the set to serve as a guide while the cast practices in Green hall. The group has been unable to use Fraser theater for practice because "The Bartered Bride" has been in production there.
John Gielgud produced "The Lady's Not for Burning" in London and brought his company to New York in 1950. It is the only professional company to do the play in the United States. The play was first released for amateur production last month.
However, once the soldier sees the young and beguiling witch, he is willing to be cleared of the murder charge.
The story concerns a discharged soldier, bitter with the world, who wanders upon a town to find it conducting a witch hunt. In an effort to divert attention from the unknown "witch" to himself, he bellows that he has committed murder and insists that he be hanged.
Museum Mails Science Papers
While the political world remains split into East and West the scientific world has retained a degree of its international co-operation.
An example of this co-operation was demonstrated this weekend when the Museum of Natural History sent over 4,000 copies of scientific papers to all parts of the world.
In return for these publications the University receives all of the scientific papers that are issued by the nearly 500 schools or scientists on its exchange lists.
Among the papers sent was a 466-page study of weasles made by Professor Hall.
Prof. E. R. Hall, director of the museum, said this is part of an exchange program in which scientific information is exchanged among specialists of similar interests. By this means the scientists keep abreast of the research going on in other places. The papers sent out concerned reptiles, mammals, birds and vertebrate paleontology.
Resulting from research by faculty and advanced students, the papers comprised 28 separate publications or reprints and filled over 20 mail sacks.
Addresses included all of the 48 states and most of the major countries of the world. Among the addresses were Peiping, China; Calcutta, India; Berlin, Germany; Basel, Switzerland, and Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Tuesday, February 5, 1952
Tri-Delt Scholarship Deadline Saturday
Application for the Delta Delta Delta annual $150 scholarship should be filed in the dean of women's office by Saturday. Any woman student is eligible to apply.
The scholarship will be awarded by the Delta Delta Delta committee on awards and will go to a student showing promise of becoming a valuable citizen in her future community.
ISA To Have Formal Dance
No. 82
The Independent Students association will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday, Feb. 16 at the Lawrence Community building.
The dance will be open to all. Bob Ausherman and his band will provide the music. Included on the program will be the presentation of a queen chosen before the dance.
The ISA asks each girls' hall to send in a picture of a queen candidate. These pictures will be judged by an ISA committee, and three or four finalists will be chosen. The ISA votes to have tea for the final choice. Prominent Lawrence businessmen present will make the final choice.
All ISA members and their dates will be admitted free. Other students will be welcomed at 75 cents per student. There will be refreshments.
Debaters To KU For State Meet
The 19 Kansas high schools entered in the contest have been divided into the three following classes, with eight judges to each class.
The University will act as host to the state high school debate tournament to be held on the campus Friday and Saturday.
Class A: Stafford, Oakley, Osborne, Abilene, Council Grove and Eureka.
Class AA: Arkansas City, Winfield, Russell, Hutchinson, Shawnee Mission and Topeka.
Class B: Winchester, Madison,
Ford, Lehigh, Haven, Emporia and
West Mineral.
Theater Tryouts To Begin Today
Tom Shay, instructor in speech and director of the lab theater said there would be seven productions this semester. One will be a full length play written and directed by William Sollner, assistant instructor in English, with music by Stewart Gordon, College junior. It will be presented in Fraser theater the week of May 5. All other lab theater productions will be in Green hall.
Tryouts for the next lab theater production, to be given Feb. 20, 21, and 22 in the Little theater in the basement of Green hall, will be today at 4 p.m. and Wednesday, Feb. 6, at 7 p.m. in the Little theater. Everyone interested in participating is invited to try out.
University Debaters Compete With Australian Students
Two of the plays to be given this semester are "A Phoenix Too Frequent" and "The Lady's Not for Burning" both by Christopher Fry.
For the first time, staging of all lab theater productions will be by the stagecraft class.
New Upstream Now On Sale
Curtain time for all plays is 8 p.m.
Season tickets are still good for the second semester. Single admission price is 25 cents.
Two Australian debaters will match wits with two University students in an international opinion forum at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 19, in Fraser theater.
The Quill club prize play, a lecture on war economy by L. J. Pritchard, professor of economics, and examples from the work of Leo M. Mailett, German-French painter, are featured in Upstream magazine now on sale in the Union and the Information booth.
Robin Millhouse, law student at the University of Adelaide, and John Boyd Reid, law student at Melbourne university, will meet Heywood Davis, College senior, and Kenneth Sulston, graduate student in speech and drama. KU will uphold the affirmative side of the question, "Resolved, that this house prefer Groucho to Karl."
The play, "An Irish Fantasy," by Robert Ziesen, College senior, won the $10 first prize in the fall Quill club contest. It will be presented soon by the lab theater.
Professor Pritchard's article is adapted from "Problems on the Home Front." a lecture given by him for the World in Crisis series.
Maillet, who is now living in Switzerland, has illustrated several of the works of Franz Kaska, a German novelist, and several of his paintings have been hung in the museum of modern art in New York City.
represent Australia in a series of international debates in the United States at a debating festival held by the National Union of Australian Universities students. They are being sponsored by the Institute of International education.
"Excluding the war years, international teams have visited KU from Great Britain, Ireland, Germany, and Turkey since 1924," Prof. E. C. Buehler, chairman of the speech and drama department, said.
The Australians were elected to
ID cards will admit students to the debate.
BOLIMBRA 15 BOLIMBRA 30
HOUGLAND SAVES A BASKET—Bill Hougland, Jayhawk guard,
(center) breaks up a shot by Frank Buckley (12) under the Colorado basket. Also in the action are Colorado's Art Bunte (30) and big Clyde Lovellette (face hidden). Kansas came from behind to win 73-68 at Hoch auditorium last night.Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Metropolitan Bass Soloist To Sing In Hoch Wednesday
"Vergin tutt'amore" and "Danza, danza fancuilia" (Durante), "Come raggio di sol" (Caldara), "Chi vuol innamorarsi" (Scaratti), "Du bist wie eine Blume" and "Ich grolle nicht" (Schumann), "Traum durch die Dammerung" and "Heimliche Aufforderung" (Richard Straus) and the aria, "Ella giamma m'amo", from "Don Carlos" (Verdi).
The program will include:
Musical Selects Production Staff
"Romance" (Debussy), "Duran Quichotta a Dulcinea" (Ravel), "Into the Night" (Clara Edwards), "None But the Lonely Heart" (Tschaikowsky), "Do Not Go. My Wright" (Richard Hageman), "When Dull Care" (arranged by H. Lane Wilson) and the aria. "La Calumnia" from "Il Barriere di Siviglia" Rossini).
Cesare Siepi, Metropolitan bass soloist, will present a recital at 8:20 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch auditorium. ID cards will admit students to this University Concert course program.
After intermission the program includes:
Anyone interested in working on the production staff should make application. Other members of the staff, such as program director, make-up director, lighting and assistant stage manager, will be selected from these applications.
The production staff is now being selected for "College Daze," a musical comedy about KU written, produced and staged entirely by students.
Application for cast secretary, publicity director and stage manager can be made at the Student Union Activities office or given to Dick Klassen, producer of "College Daze," by noon, Friday, Feb. 8.
The fifth annual presentation of "College Daze" will be given April 30, May 1, 2 and 3 in Fraser theater.
Journalism Graduate Named Convention Publicity Director
Robert Carl, '50, journalism graduate, has been named director of publicity for the 1952 national convention of the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce to be held June 24-27 in Dallas, Texas.
Carl is in sales-promotion work in Dallas. While attending KU he served on the advertising and news staffs of the Daily Kansas, the Jayawaker and other campus publications.
Inter-Fraternity Elects Officers
Keith Melvor, engineering junior,
was elected president of the Inter-
Fraternity council for the spring
semester at a meeting last night.
His newly-elected cabinet includes: David Hill, College junior, vice-president; Walter Rickel, pharmacy junior, secretary, and Dale Dodge, business junior, treasurer.
Kenneth Merrill, business senior; Frank Norris, business junior; Philip Kassebaum, College junior; William Wilson, engineering, junior, and Marvin Rausch, College senior, were elected members of the executive committee.
In other business the council voted to disband plans for floats for the KU relays since the relays have been scheduled during the week of spring vacation. Tentative plans for a campus "Greek week" were presented to the group, but no definite action was taken.
KU Among Losers When Ship Sinks
University orders for German-made drawing instruments and a Leitz enlarger are believed to have gone down with the Flying Enterprises Co. Henrich Carlsen fought to save from the North Atlantic seas.
L. E. Woolley, director of the Student Union, said that the drawing instruments were being sent to the department store and that the order was insured.
The Leitz enlarger, to be used by the school of journalism, was ordered through the Mosser-Wolf camera supply store in Lawrence.
Russell Mosser, part owner, said today that the enlarger has been delayed for some reason and he has been informed the sinking of the Enterprise is probably the cause.
"Sociology on the Air," the only program of its kind in the United States, marked its first anniversary Sunday.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 5, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
'Old Curmudgeon' Was Unique Political Figure
When Harold L. Ickes died Sunday national politics lost one of its most colorful figures. Although he had a long record of public life he probably will be at least as well remembered as a master of the tart reply. He had the knack of making opponents seem ludicrous simply by tagging them with his personal and very often hilarious labels.
From 1912, when he was a county chairman of the Bull Moose campaign committee, until he died his career was a center of controversy. It was during stormy sessions with political opponents that he coined many of his barbed labels.
He frequently disagreed with the late Sen. Huey P. Long of Louisiana, and finally decided that Long had "halitosis of the intellect."
During the heated New York senatorial campaign in 1949 John Foster Dulles was the Republican nominee. Ickes promptly jumped into the fight and called Dulles a candidate with "political falsies" because of alleged inconsistencies in some of Mr. Dulles' statements.
Ickes always was an ardent New Yorker and served in President Truman's cabinet until he resigned in 1946 because he disagreed with some of the President's appointees. But in the 1948 presidential campaign he supported Mr. Truman with this opener: "In a choice between Thomas Elusive Dewey, the candidate in sneakers, I prefer to support Mr. Truman."
Ickes pinned his barbed labels on people the world over—including himself. He once called himself "the old curmudgeon," and seemed to delight in the knowledge that he was not popular with many people.
He once remarked that he knew he wasn't loved with "the fervor to which I'm entitled. If a man worked hard at it he couldn't get a bigger list of enemies than I."
Liked or disliked Harold Ickes was a unique political figure. His ready wit provided a refreshing change from the ordinary politician—a breed which very often takes itself so seriously that it forgets to laugh. —Jack Zimmerman.
Mike DiSalle Runs Again
Mike DiSalle, Mr. Five-by-Five of the OPS, has stated his intent to run for the Senate against Republican John Bricker of Ohio. This isn't the first time he has considered running for senator. He ran for the Democratic nomination in 1950 and was defeated.
In fact DiSalle has been running for office ever since he was graduated from college. In Toledo he was a member of the city council, re-elected for four terms, elected vice-mayor for two, then he was elected mayor. It was from this office that he was called to Washington to fill the office of price stabilizer.
As price stabilizer DiSalle has taken some big steps to halt inflation. The biggest step being the general price freeze, a bout which he won from Dr. Alan Valentine, former administrator of the Economic Stabilization agency. DiSalle decided to freeze everything considered a necessity, then control the thawing-out process. Valentine was in favor of a slow freeze on the necessities as a means of preventing black markets. DiSalle has met everything from the meat to the cotton industry and usually has come out on top.
DiSalle admits he is a politician and is proud of it, because he says he is proud to serve his country in every way.
He seems to be a campaigner with the unusual twist that he accomplishes what he sets out to do. One reason for his success is that people like him. Another is that he believes in what he is campaigning for.
He has an understanding of what has to be done to avoid inflation from the consumer standpoint and has the guts to do it (more than 200 pounds worth). It is too bad he doesn't want to see his job through. —Nancy F. Anderson.
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Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence, Published in Lawrence, Kan, every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Can the United States and Russia settle their differences peacefully? Three-fourths of the nation's college students feel "there is still a chance," but not a good one.
Comments . . .
Results of the Associated Collegiate Press national poll of student opinion indicate that seven per cent of the students feel that chances for peace are good, while 13 per cent think there is no chance.
Many feel that "chances would be improved by more 'give and take,'" as a sophomore at an eastern engineering college put it.
Students were asked: How do you feel about chances for a peaceful settlement of differences between Russia and the United States? The answers:
1. Chances are good ... 7%
2. Chances are fair ... 31%
3. Chances are poor ...45%
3. Chances are poor ... 45%
4. New York ... 126%
4. No chances 13%
5. No opinion 4%
Students who foresee little chance of peace blame the situation on Russia, human nature and United States diplomacy. Says a senior in Alabama, "I don't think differences can be settled now because of the Russian government. I look for a revolt in Russia."
"If people want peace, they have it," says a business sophomore. But a senior in liberal arts feels that "It's human nature to be warlike."
Here's a sample of other comments:
A freshman coed in journalism:
"Chances are poor—I don't know too much about it, but Russia will have to be shown how powerful we are."
A senior from the midwest: "Chances are poor—There must be a meeting at the halfway mark. Neither side is yet willing to truly compromise."
A coed in fine arts: "The only way peace can be obtained is through war."
A girl taking business: "With two great nations one will have to give in."
A senior in liberal arts: "Chances are poor-at the present time we lack qualified international leaders who understand both political aspects."
A senior in education: "Chances are fair . . . with proper leadership . . ."
A freshman in medical school:
"Chances are good—but for these chances to come about we need diplomats and not politicians."
Educator Compares China To A Clam
Cincinnati—(U.P.)-Dr. Y, P. Mei, Chinese educator and visiting professor of philosophy at the University of Cincinnati, predicts the eventual return of China as a respected member of the United Nations.
Dr. Mei described China as being like a clam, which he said has characterized his country for nearly 4,000 years.
"China today is in one of those opening-up phases."
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Candidate Kefauver Will Get Little Support From Truman
If Estes Kefauver, senator from Tennessee, expects to win the Democratic nomination for president of the United States, he can't depend on any help from President Truman and regular Democrats.
President Truman has expressed his belief that Senator Kefauver is a nice fellow, a good senator, and that he likes to see good senators in the Senate.
Democrat politicians oppose Kefauver because of his work as chairman of the Senate crime investigating committee. By exposing corruption in the nation's biggest cities he attacked his own party.
Truman has indicated he's not too interested in getting the nomination for himself. But he has indicated that if there is no other way to keep Kefauver out of the race, he might run again.
Whom does Truman want? Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson, perhaps. But he won't run. Another White House choice might be Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois. He was recently summoned for a conference with Truman. Their discussion results weren't disclosed.
Stevenson could be a likely nominee because of his being the former assistant to the secretary of state. He could defend the administration's foreign policy easily. But one drawback is that he is an extreme Fair Dealer and many southern Democrats hold that against him.
Kefauver supporters are working for two main things: a swing big enough to help the President step aside and a delegate line-up strong enough to prevent Truman from naming his own choice, which probably would not be the coonskin senator.
If Truman steps out of the nomination picture the Democrat professional politics will have to agree on a candidate in his place.
Kefauver has as good a chance as anybody for winning if the race becomes wide open because the professionals can't always control the convention delegates. Helen Lou Frv.
News From Other Campuses
Beginning next semester, extra hours will be available to University of Illinois students for their club activities. There will be no classes between 1 and 2 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays but the first and third Thursdays of each month will be set aside for some type of all-university convocation. The other free hours may be used for student organizations and activities.
Extra Hours For Clubs
Begins New Course Plan
Abolition of the traditional four-year program for undergraduates in favor of an advance-as-you-learn plan will be one of the future goals of Johns Hopkins university. Under this plan there would be virtually no restrictions on students as to time, scope or specific study.
'Cincy' Joins Book Club
The University of Cincinnati is one of 15 Midwestern universities participating in the new Midwest Inter-Library center recently completed at Chicago. The new center was made possible by a grant of one million dollars from the Carnegie and Rockefeller foundations.
Fordham Stresses Religion
Fordham university is continuing its program of personal integration. In agreement with the universal concern of educators that students achieve the "whole view," Fordham stresses the importance of religious truth as the basic integrating principle. An annual series of special exercises is held early in the fall semester at which attendance is obligatory. Academic meetings are suspended and for three days all student assemblies are held in the university church.
To Become U.S. Citizen
Hungarian's Flight From Communists Led To KU Via Vienna And Zurich
By JOE TAYLOR
The story of a Hungarian student being forced to flee his country when the Communists took over and his subsequent adventures until he came to the University is graphically told by Zoltan Dios, graduate student.
Dios came to the United States in June of this year knowing that a scholarship at the University was awaiting him and that a University cooperative house had granted him a guest membership.
Dios was sitting quietly on a high work stool in the electrical laboratory at the University. Laying aside the delicate parts which he was assembling into a new piece of equipment, he told his story.
"This organization of all students in Hungary had been working closely with Premier Nagy in helping solve student problems. Nagy was very sympathetic to us and so heavy bonds linked our group to the coalition government he headed," Dios explained.
"Four years ago in Budapest as a graduate of the Joseph Nador Technical University of Budapest, I was president of the National Union of Hungarian Students.
Since coming, he has filed his first papers declaring his intention to become an American citizen.
"The Communists, under the guise of ridding the government of bad influences, began a purge. Premier Nagy was forced to flee to Switzerland to the U.S.. All who were connected with his group were also in danger."
Then in June the entire political picture suddenly changed, he said.
On June 19, 1947, two of Dios' friends were arrested by the pro-Communists. Realizing that he was next, Dios fed to Vienna where he was recognized as a political refugee. The German government to be a lecturer to German and English students on the events taking place in Hungary.
"Then in the latter part of 1947 I went to Switzerland and took up my studies again," he continued. This time he was at the Technical Institute of Zurich, where he studied for three years.
During this time Dios was frequently invited to conferences in Europe which discussed student problems. Of prime importance was the question of aiding students in the Communist occupied countries.
At one of these conferences in Denmark in 1949, the Midwest seminar, Dios became acquainted with two University representatives, Eds. Dixon and associate professor sociology, and John Ise, professor of economics.
"While at the meeting Professors Baur and Ise promised to try to make it possible for me to come to the U.S. for study," Dios said. "In April of 1950 Professor Baur notified me that arrangements had been made through the International Refugee organization.
"The University made available a scholarship for advanced study, and Don Henry Co-op accepted me as a guest member." he added.
Tuesday, February 5, 1952 University Daily Kansan
After some delay, Dios was cleared
The comic opera in three acts was presented by the University Light Opera guild at Fraser theater.
He is quite firm about the obligations any DP has in coming to the U.S. "We must prove that the trust shown in the displaced persons law is justified and we must help each other become part of our new land," he said.
for passage and boarded a transport ship for this country.
He is meeting these requirements himself. Immediately upon his arrival on campus in midsummer he
'Bartered Bride Wins Applause
"The Bartered Bride" in its first presentation last night was brilliantly colorful and gay and showed a well experienced and rehearsed cast.
The clever plot, concerning the arrangement of the marriage of Marie, the heroine, to Vashek, a simple peasant lad, ran quite smoothly. Quick changes in mood were accomplished by the interception of lively dances. Bright, beautiful costumes emphasized the lightness of the opera.
For an opening Monday night performance, the receptive audience was very good.
Fred Tarry, fine arts sophomore, handled the very difficult tenor role of Jenik, Marie's true love, with considerable musical ability.
By MARILYN DUBACH
William Oldham, education junior,
did a very good job of capturing the
character of stuttering, blundering
Vashek, a simple peasant lad.
One of the highlights of the opera was the group of strolling players, who entered in the third act. An array of variously costumed players included Ernest Dale, College freshman, the principal comedian, and Carla Ann Haber, education junior, the Spanish dancer.
Phyllis McFarland, fine arts senior, displayed excellent musical and dramatic talent portraying vivacious Marie, the heroine.
Mosup, Conn. — (U.P.)—The new increase in withholding taxes is no worry to Arthur A. Delmonico. Less than a week after the boost went into effect, his wife gave birth to triplets. Delmonico now claims six dependents.
The comic opera will also be given Tuesday and Friday at 8:15 p.m. and at 3:15 p.m. Thursday. Tickets may be obtained at the box office in Green hall. ID cards will not admit students.
Taxes Don't Worry Him Now
ForeignStudent Sends Stories To Home Town Newspaper
Yujiro Maeda of Osaka, Japan, has an ideal setup for a feature writer. A graduate student in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, Maeda sends feature articles on his impressions of American college life to the Mainichi newspaper of Osaka.
The arrangement is working out perfectly. "My daily experiences about which I write," he says, "are all new to me and the Japanese people. My big impression of American university life is that you are very practical, more practical than academic."
Enrolled in editorial journalism. Maeda is finding his work much easier than might be expected because of his training on the English edition of the Japanese newspaper.
The son of Mr. and Mrs. Kamejiro Maeda of Osaka, Maeda is a graduate of the University of Osaka. He worked for three years on the Mainichi newspaper before coming to KU. He explains that the newspaper is printed in both English and Japanese. He covered the Chamber of Commerce beat for both editions. He said most of the staff on the English edition had attended journalism schools in the United States.
The International Institute of Education under the U.S. Army is sponsoring Maeda's study here. As a result of a-test taken in Japan, he was allowed to come to the U.S. where he was assigned to study at the University of Illinois and other expenses for two semesters. He is living at 714 Mississippi.
Maeda will return to Japan in June. He says he has "no special plans" regarding his work on returning to Japan other than working for the Mainichi.
took a job as a service station attendant so that he could pay his own share at the co-op house.
Since that time he has become janitor at the city jail in exchange for sleeping quarters. "In this way," he explained, "there is now room for someone else to move into the co-op."
Woman Named As Kansan Sports Editor
The sports desk of the University Daily Kansan is being run by a woman.
Jacqueline Jones, journalism junior, was named to the position to serve for the first half of the spring semester. She began her career as a soccer player and women's intramurals, but will now be in charge of varsity athletics.
She likes the job, but is not sure how Lovellette and company will appreciate having a woman report their cage affairs.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 5, 1952
KU Downs Colorado Buffs By 5 Points In Close Game
By JACKIE JONES
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
A fired up band of Colorado Buffaloes moved into Hoch auditorium last night, and gave Coach "Phog" Allen's Jayhawks one of their biggest scares of the season; the Kansas squad winning 8.
The Buffs were deadly on long shots, and their accuracy was almost too much for a Kansas team which was undoubtedly let down after their high-scoring victory over Iowa State Saturday night.
In the first four minutes the Buffers got off to a 11-9 lead, hitting 100 per cent from the field, and their pace cooled only slightly during the quarter.
As the second period began the Buffs were leading the Jayhawks 20-17, but in that period the Kansas boys began to hit and at the half they were matching Colorado basket for basket. The score at the half was 34-30 in favor of the Jayhawks.
Big Clyde Lovellette, the All-American from Indiana, had one of his best nights of the season. He countered for 34 points, and in the hectic final quarter he grabbed rebounds and stole the ball in a manner seldom displayed by the giant center.
Bob Kenney displayed his usual consistent scoring ability, dumping in 17 points, many of them on his
Cage Star Stays At OU
Manhattan. Kan. —(U.P.)—Kansas State Basketball Coach Jack Gardner was pleased today, he said, with Oklahoma player Ron Blue's decision to remain at the Sooner school.
Blue, whose home is in Wellington, Kan., earlier expressed a desire to transfer to K-State.
Gardner said that contrary to previous reports, the Oklahoma player definitely was not offered an athletic scholarship at the Kansas school.
"In fact, the idea of his coming to K-State was a complete surprise to me," Gardner added.
The Wildcat coach said that when he learned Blue was thinking of coming to K-State he immediately advised him to talk to his parents and Oklahoma Coach Bruce Drake.
"Tm glad the Wellington, Kan,
boy decided to stay at Oklahoma,
said Gardner. "I wish him luck and
hope he learns to like OU."
A letter received from Blue, in which he presented the possibility of his transfer, was dated Jan. 29, Gardner said. It read, in part:
"You might think it funny receiving a letter from me, so I will come straight to the point . . . I would like to enroll at Kansas State this semester. I know that I intended to come up last year at this time but some very persistent people talked me out of it. But if you can use me I will definitely enroll at Kansas State this week."
hard driving lay-ups.
The man who nearly downed the Jayhawks, was Arthur Bunte, a freshman from Denver. The 6-foot, 4-inch center was all over the court in the final quarter pouring in points from almost unbelievable angles. He scored 15 points for the evening, but eight of those came in the final eight minutes.
As the final stanza began, the Jay-
hawks were holding what appeared to be a comfortable 55-48 lead, but the Buffs caught fire and scored on nine out of eleven attempts from the field.
It took just 25 seconds of the fourth quarter for the Colorado quintet to tie the score. Bunte and Conway scored two quick baskets each, and Bunte also hit a free throw.
The Jayhawks called a time out, and sent in B. H. Born, giving Kansas two 6-foot, 9-inchers. From there to the final minute the score never varied more than three points in favor of either team.
Lovellette put the Jayhawks back in the lead with four minutes to go, with a hook shot, and the Buffs never caught up.
With just a few seconds to go, Lovellette stole the ball and passed to Kenney, who banked a neat lay-up off the boards, giving the Jayhawks a hard fought 73 to 68 victory.
Box Score
Colorado (68) G. FT. F.
Gompert 7 4 1
Jeangerard 0 0 1
Lawson 0 0 1
Munns 0 0 2
Bulkeley 1 0 0
Bunte 7 1 4
Holdorson 0 0 0
Koop 4 2 3
Branby 3 3 5
Conway 1 0 0
Harrold 1 0 1
Stewart 2 6 3
Totals 26 16 21
Kansas (73) G. FT. F.
Davenport 3 1 4
Kenney 6 5 1
Lienhard 2 2 1
Lovellette 12 10 4
Born 0 0 0
Heitholt 0 0 0
Hoag 1 0 0
Hougland 3 1 4
Kelley 0 0 0
Smith 0 0 0
Score By Quarters
Colorado ... 20 10 18 20—68
Kansas ... 17 17 21 18—73
Free throws missed: Colorado:
Gompert, Bunte 3, Koop. Kansas:
Lovellette 2, Hougland.
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Trophies, medals and invitations to two big intercollegiate tournaments await the winners of the 1952 intramural bridge tournament which will begin Tuesday, Feb. 12, at 7:15 p.m. in the Student Union game room.
Bridge Players To Hold Meet
James Burgoyne, director of Student Union activities, announced today that three trophies for first, second, and third place, plus individual medals for the members of the top four teams will be offered. The winning bridge teams will also be KU's representatives to the National Intercollegiate Bridge tournament and the Big Seven tournament which will be held later.
Entries for the three day tournament will be by teams of two persons each and should be submitted before Monday noon, Feb. 11, at the SUA office. There will be an entry fee of 50 cents for each team.
Each organized house and organization is invited to enter two teams. Additional partnerships may enter as independent teams. Only students now enrolled in KU are eligible.
Mr. Burgoyne said that last year's tournament was entered by about 80 persons. The field is wide open for new winners as none of the top teams from last year will be entered again.
Oil Burner Worse Than Bull
Greenwich, Conn.—(U.P.) M a r y Barnit wouldn't want a bull to walk into her china shop but she has seen worse. The bull, she says, couldn't do any more damage than when the oil burner in her store back-fired. The slight explosion caused enough vibration to destroy $10,000 worth of china and crystal.
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Weaver's Notions—Main Floor
Admission Free Film Showing - Group Discussion Hawk's Nest-Feb.6-7:30 p.m. EUROPE 1952
All those interested in traveling through Europe this summer are invited to attend a special film showing and discussion in the Hawk's Nest, balcony, February 6th, at 7:30 p.m. Free coke and coffee. Admission free.
Don't delay in making your summer travel plans definite. Space on sailings and flights to Europe are extremely limited. Make reservations promptly. For descriptive literature on tours and places to go, phone 3661 or see—
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
1015 Massachusetts
Mrs. Lois Odaffer
Phone 3661
Mr. Joe Brown
Oil or the oil is the main component of the earth's crust. It is also a key resource for energy production and transportation. The oil reserves are estimated to be around 10 billion barrels. The extraction process involves drilling into the Earth's crust to extract oil from underneath. This process requires significant investment and resources, but it can provide a reliable source of energy.
Page 5
Kansas Ranked Sixth By AP Basketball Poll
The Kansas Jayhawks dropped from fourth to sixth place in the latest Associated Press basketball poll, but managed to stay well up in the top ten after defeating Iowa State college Saturday night.
The AP ratings, announced today,
gave the top spot back to Adolph Rupp's Kentucky Wildcats. The
Wildcats defeated Vanderbilt, Auburn and Notre Dame within six days.
Kentucky picked up 811 points to edge out Kansas State and Illinois, both powerful mid-western quintets. The K-Staters attracted 23 first place votes to retain their runner-up spot with 751 points.
University Daily Kansan
Illinois remained third with eight first place votes and 705 points. Kansas State holds a 13-3 record and the Illini have a 13-1 mark.
The only two undefeated major teams in the college ranks are St. Bonaventure and Duquesne. The Bonnies now rest in the fourth spot and Duquesne climbed two notches into the fifth position.
The United Press lists the top ten in similar order, with KU also holding the sixth spot in their poll. The Kansas State Wildcats are in lead, just behind the Kentucky and Illinois quintets. Kentucky rated 302 points. Illinois got 300 and Kansas State 247.
The top ten and their points in the AP poll are:
Teams and won-lost record Pts.
Kentucky (41) 16-2 811
Kansas State (23) 13-3 751
Illinois (8) 13-1 705
St. Bonaventure (12) 13-0 558
Duquesne (10) 15-0 524
Kansas 14-2 384
St. Louis (2) 15-4 374
Washington (5) 17-3 362
Iowa (1) 12-1 336
St. John's 15-2 223
Basketball Trials To Begin Mar, 29
New York - (U.P.) The U.S Olympic basketball trials will open in New York and Kansas City, March 29, Asa S. Bushen, secretary of the U.S. Olympic committee, announced today.
The NCAA champions will play the NAIB tournament champion in Kansas City with the National AAU runner-up playing the National AAU third or fourth place team.
At Madison Square garden in New York, the National Invitation tournament champion will meet the NCAA runner-up and the National AAU titleholder will play the AAU third or fourth place team.
The semi-finals will be played in New York, March 31, and the finals. April 1.
Baseball Greats Lost To Game In Coming Year
BY MAX THOMPSON
The absence of Joe DiMaggio, the pillar of the New York Yankees for some 15 seasons, will be sorely felt by not only his own teammates but by the other players and sports-writers who admired the Yankee Clipper. Joe retired when his physical ailments hampered him from being the peerless performer that he was during his active career. As he said when he announced his retirement, the game was no longer fun for him so he decided to quit even though he probably could have played part-time for a few more seasons at a good salary.
When spring training opens March 1 for major league baseball, several outstanding players of seasons past whose faces were familiar in baseball circles will be missing.
Along with DiMaggio another one of the national game's all-time greats who will be missing is Ted Williams, the Boston Red Sox batting star who was recalled back into active duty by the Marine Corps. Some baseball experts feel that Ted's return to the service means the end of his major league career because he will be too old to play after he finishes his time with the Marines.
The draft has made many inroads in the ranks of major league baseball, with such players as Willie Mays of the New York Giants, and Don Newcombe of the Brooklyn Dodgers having been summoned by Ucle Sam.
Other top stars such as Ralph Kiner of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Alvin Dark of the New York Giants and Gerry Coleman of the New York Yankees, who are in reserve units, may be called back to duty before or during the 1952 baseball season.
Many outstanding minor league players who worked out in major league training camps last year and were scheduled to play in the majors this season have had to go into the army.
Women To Play In Final Games
The final division games of the Women's Intramural basketball program will be played in Robinson gym tonight and Wednesday.
By JACKIE JONES
Several of the best teams will face easy competition, but two of the top squads will meet each other in what should be the season's toon game.
Foster hall and Alpha Chi Omega will clash at 9 p.m. Wednesday, and the division crown will go to the winner.
In this game, three of the top forwards in intramural competition will meet and the final score probably will be in the high figures. Shirley Mickelson and Ernestine Dehlinger play for Foster, while Mary Ann Mahoney should be the sparkplug of the Alpha Chi's.
Last year's champions, Kappa Alpha Theta, will meet Alpha Delta Pi at 8 Wednesday, and a victory would give the talented Thetas the crown in their division.
Games This Week Tonight 8:00
Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. Alpha Phi Theta Phi Alpha vs. Freshman KMM Chi Omega vs. Freshman BA
Pi Beta Phi vs. Watkins Cohops vs. Freshman AA
9:00
ednest
7:00
Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. Fresh. MJ Jayettes vs. Alpha Phi
Wednesday
Gamma Phi Beta vs. Freshman BL Kappa Alpha Theta vs. Alpha D Pi
Alpha Chi Omega vs. Foster
9.00
Cage Scores
Boston College 95, Tufts 64
Holy Cross 80, Syracuse 75
Amherst 45, Massachusetts 11
Connecticut 70, Boston U. 64
St. Bonaventure 78, J. Carroll 66
Duquesne 71, LaSalle 60
Loyola (Ill.) 91, Westminster (Pa.) 62
Alabama 67, Florida U. 59
Gemson 80, Geo. Wash. 56
Louisiana St. 73, Ga. Tech 51
Kentucky 103, Tulane 54
Vanderbilt 59, Mississippi 51
N. Car. State 62, Pittsburgh 54
Virginia 84, Wash. & Lee 70
---
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
and on I rode... and greater was my thirst
Tennyson: Holy Grail
...
and on I rode...
Tuesday, February 5, 1952
5¢ DRINK Coca-Cola
The farther you go the more you need refreshment. That's why you'll hear folks say, "Let's have a Coke and get going." It's one way to get somewhere.
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY "Coke" is a registered trade-mark. © 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
There is "no significant difference" between the grades of college athletes and those of other students, according to the conclusions reached in a recent study made by the University.
Athletes' Grades 'Average'
Using adding machines, theses and psychological tests, the University has combined three studies made in three different places and arrived at the conclusions which are condensed into a bulletin by Edwin R. Elbel, professor of physical education.
Junior high, high school and college lettermen were compared in the study to nonlettermen in the same schools. High school lettermen came out even with the other students, while the junior high athletes averaged a little better than the non-athletes. The comparisons were made by "means," or halfway marks between high and low rather than by averages.
The study found the "mean grade" for college football lettermen to be "significantly lower" than the mean for nonletter winners. Actually the difference was about the distance between a C and a C plus.
The college athlete study was made at a "Kansas teachers college" where 185 lettermen in football, basketball and track from 1928 through 1950 were matched against non-athletes of the same age, school
Calif. (Pa.) Teachers 73, Fairmont
Teachers 65
Richmond 68, Hampden-Sydney 67
Shaw U. 52, Bluefield State 35
Iowa 58, Butter 57
Cape Girardeau Teachers 59.
year, intelligence rating and school major.
Kirksville Teachers 39
Detroit 40, Okla. A&M 42
St. Louis 59, Drake 57
Lake Forest 58, Santa Barbara 57
Minnesota 84, Ohio State 65
N. Dakota St. 0, So. Dakota U. 57
Sore Dam 7, Wayne 69
Wayne (NY) 64, Purdue 53
Wayne 94, No. Michigan 45
Kansas 73, Colorado 68
Oklahoma 49, Iowa*State 45
St. John's (Kan.) 63, Friends U. 62
So. Methodist 54, Arkansas 50
Texas Col. 54, Butler Col. 39
Omaha 67, Nebraska W. 48
The junior high school study was made of the records of 200 letter winners and 200 non-athletes in six Topeka schools through 1949 to 1951 with the athletes leading in all comparisons.
The high school study was made of 195 lettermen and 195 nonlettermen in a Wichita high school from 1944 to 1948. In all sports, the lettermen and nonlettermen averaged about even.
Other results in the college study showed basketball lettermen about held their own, track lettermen did slightly better, but multiple sport lettermen scored significantly lower. World War II lettermen made substantially higher grades than the vonuneter lettermen.
Robert Allen Briggs of Topeka, M. Doyle Koontz of Robinson and Keith Caywood of Kansas State Teachers college, Emporia, made the three studies used in the University bulletin.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY
(Nationally Accredited)
An outstanding college serving a splendid profession.
Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses.
REGISTRATION February 25. Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. government of defense and Selgeling Service.
Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY 1845-H Larrabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois
How Advertising
... brings you news about better products you need
... tells you where to get what you want when you want it
... makes lower prices possible through mass production and mass selling
How Advertising Helps You Get MORE FOR YOUR MONEY
Advertising
Bread
Yet Picture How Little All This Costs
For instance, advertising bigname brands of bread costs less than the wrapper.
Any other method of selling would cost the manufacturer more and therefore raise the price. Otherwise he wouldn't use advertising.
Page 6
University Daily Kansas
Tuesday, February 5, 1952
KU Women's Billfolds Reveal More Than Money, Identification
By JOAN LAMBERT
A billfold technically is a container for money and identification, but a glance into several being carried around the campus by KU women puts this function in doubt.
A thorough investigation into their contents reveals some profound sidelights on a girl's personality. It is astounding to discover what some coeds consider precious enough to carry with them.
A new red leather job with a zipper on three sides was the first specimen in this investigation. Inside, the most prominent item on display was an ID card with a "i" punched in the identification picture. Opposite the card was a driver's license stating that the billfold's owner was 19 years old, five foot two, blue-eveed and weighing 110 pounds.
The coin pocket contained a silver dollar, 62 cents in change, one Topeka bus token and a key to the engineering library.
A plastic card file, a social security card, a Jayhawker card, a number one basketball schedule, a small picture of a young male and four pictures of girl friends.
Besides one lone dollar bill, the back pocket held five receipts for fees and room and board, a rebate slip from the Student Union bookstore, an adding machine tape, a deposit slip from the State Bank of Meriden dated Nov. 21, a shopping list of kleenex and shampoo and another ID card punched "2".
Another billfold of black leather fastened with a gold strap and beginning to show wear at the corners, revealed an even greater variety of essentials. Inside was a pasteboard back from a small note pad and a shopping list for film, picture frames, yarn, records and a plant.
A series of plastic pass holders held an Inter-Varsity calendar, a Kappa Phi membership card, an Engineering Exposition souvenir calendar for 1951, a receipt for spring fees, a Jayhawker card, a piece of paper for cleaning glasses and a
Davidson-Webber Plan Wedding
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Davidson,
Leavenworth, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sally Jean,
to Mr. David L. Webber, Kansas City,
Can., son of Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Webber,
Stafford.
Miss Davidson is a College junior and a resident of Watkins hall. Mr Webber was graduated from the School of Engineering in 1951 and is now employed in the aircraft division of the General Motors Assembly plant in Fairfax, Kansas City, Kan.
Dr. Patton To Lead Discussion Before KU Presbyterian Men
Dr. John H. Patton, former administrative director of the KU westminster foundation, recently returned from service as an U.S. Air Force Chaplain, will lead a discussion on "The Inevitability of War" before the KU Presbyterian Men Tuesday.
The meeting will begin with a supper at 6 p.m. at Westminster house. Dr. Patton will introduce the subject with a short talk and the open discussion will follow.
Faculty Club To Have Dinner
Faculty Club To Have Dinner
The Faculty club will entertain
with a dinner at 7 p.m. Friday in
the club dining room. Bridge will
be played. Reservations should be
made by Wednesday evening by
calling Dean and Mrs. Leonard Axe
at 1334, or Dean and Mrs. J. Allen
scene. 3932.
scrap of paper covered with cryptic numbers. Questioning revealed these numbers to be the times busses and trains left Lawrence for Illinois.
The coin pocket contained a rubber band, 37 cents in change, four bookstore rebate tickets and three movie theater stubs.
The bill compartment held $14 plus one bobbie pin, another rebate ticket, two blank checks, a receipt for an insured package mailed Jan. 24 and a Christmas card from "grandma."
When asked, however, where her ID card was, the owner said it was home in her desk drawer.
Lawrence-Sheppeard Wedding Announced
Miss Nancy Lee Lawrence, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Burt Edward Lawrence, Iola, and Mr. Lee Channing Sheppeard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee Sheppeard, Clay Center, were married at 2:30 p.m. Sat., Jan. 26 at St. John's church in Iola.
Preceding the ceremony Mrs. Paul Ellis, Iola, played a program of organ music and during the service she played Schubert's "Ave Maria." Mrs. Ellis also played the wedding march from "Lohengrin" by Wagner for the processional and Mendelssohn's wedding march from "A Midsummer Night's Dream," for the recessional.
The bride wore an eggshell white knit two-piece dress. Her hat of saturn straw was orchid color and she carried a fan-shaped shower bouquet of stephanotis centered with an orchid.
Miss Ruth Armstrong, Cleveland, Ohio, was the maid of honor. She wore a knit dress of royal blue with a white skimmer hat of milan straw. Her bouquet of pink Aristocrat roses was fan-shaped with shower ribbons and stephanotis.
Mr. Phil Meyer, Clay Center, was best man for Mr. Shepeard. The ushers were Mr. Robert E. Lacy and William Tavlor, both of Iola.
Mr. and Mrs. Sheppeard will live until the end of the school year in Lawrence. Mrs. Sheppeard is a fine arts junior and a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Mr. Sheppeard is a journalism senior and a member of Sigma Chi fraternity.
Spencer-Taylor Engagement Told
Mr. and Mrs. Flavious Spencer, Lawrence, announce the engagement of their daughter, Arlee Rocena, to Charles Milton Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Taylor, St. Louis, Mo.
Miss Spencer is an education junior and Mr. Taylor is a College senior. The wedding date will be announced later.
The designers are A. Robert Miller of Nelly Don in Kansas City Bassett, artist for Georgia Bullock in Los Angeles and also for Nelly Don.
The illustrations show the condition of the art work as it goes to the advertiser.
Fashion Illustrations Now On Exhibition
A selection of original fashion illustrations is being exhibited until Friday, Feb. 15, on the third floor of the west end of Strong hall.
GUYS and GALS WINTER PARK, COLORADO
SKI PARTY WEEKEND
FEBRUARY 22
ONLY $58.00
equipment Furnished
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
1015 Mass.
Phone 3661
Carolyn Isern, Pi Beta Phi, Ellinwood, to Dean Wells, Phi Delta Theta, Great Bend.
Campus Pinnings
Emily Missidine, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Wichita, to James Van Antwerp, Kappa Sigma, Scott City.
Nancy Morsbach, Pi Beta Phi, Wichita, to Winton Winter, Beta Theta Pi, Lawrence.
courses
Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. Wednesday, Home Economics dining room, Fraser hall.
AWS Workshop Stresses Leadership
Three different aspects of leadership will be stressed by speakers for the annual Leadership Workshop sponsored by the Associated Women Students Feb. 7, 12 and 14 in Strong auditorium.
Miss Carmine Wolf will open the series at 7:15 p.m. Thurs. Feb. 7, with a talk on "Leadership in the Community." Mrs. Herk Harvey, the former Bee Brady, will speak Tues. Feb. 12, on "Leadership on the Campus."
Three delegates from each women's organized house will be elected to attend the workshop, but in addition, anyone interested in leadership may attend.
Harry Adamson, Topeka, will close the workshop with "The Spiritual Aspects of Leadership" Thurs., Feb. 14. Each evening's program will consist of the main speech followed by discussion by the group.
Official Bulletin
QST Amateur radio club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, E. E. lab. Everyone welcome
Square Dance club, 7.30 p.m. Wednesday, Recreation room, Union. All invited.
Jr. Panhellenic, 4:30 today, Delta Gamma house.
All Student Council, 7:30 tonight,
Pine room, Union.
Quill club, 7 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Union.
Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday,
Myers hall.
Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday,
111 Strong.
Student Religious council, 4 today. Myers hall.
KuKu club, 7:15 p.m. Thursday,
105 Green, Election.
ASTE, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
Fowler shops.
International club meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Pine room, Union. Dr. Sandelius, speaker, "Constitutional Government and World Crisis." Foreign and American graduate students invited.
Student Union board meeting. 4:30 p.m.Wednesday, East room Union.
Campus Affairs committee, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 222 Strong.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira mardi 5 fevrier a sept heures et demie dans la salle 113 Strong.
Intramural Bridge tournament,
7:15 p.m., February 12, 13, 14. Recreation room, Union. Register SUA office by Monday noon. Enter as a team, 50 cents per team. All students welcome.
Theta Phi Alpha sorority announces the recent pledging of Patricia Lea Schulte, College sophomore from Girard.
Patricia Schulte Pledged
Someone Having a
Birthday?
Give a Book.
We have a fine selection from which to choose. Come in and see them.
THE BOOK NOOK
Phone 666
1021 Mass.
It's The Little Things That Count
For those who think it best to know a little bit about a lot of things, here are a few collected odds and ends concerning the feminine world which might strike someone's fancy.
Bv DIANNE STONEBRAKER
With the spring semester still an infant there are undoubtedly many students who find themselves in a new room which they would like to decorate. Here is an inexpensive way to change the personality of an average collegiate room.
Make curtains out of burlap, choosing a bright color like yellow or a conservative shade like tan. Just put a hem in the material and hang it--it's as simple as that.
With the leftover material unravel the edges of a rectangular piece until it is deeply fringed, and you have a dresser scarf.
If you have a scrap or two, tack a square piece of material on four bamboo frames, and you have a bulletin board to match your room. a square piece of material onto four against bright material than they do against a standard brown bulletin board background.
a new room out of an old room in a new way, and end up with a room not only original, collegiate and attractive, but one which cost only a few dollars to redecorate.
If you have a lamp shade whose color doesn't blend in with your color scheme, buy a skin of heavy rug yarn in the shade you want and wind the yarn lengthwise around the shade.
This is one way in which to make
Theta Tau Pledges Two Men
Your
Two men were recently pledged to Theta Tau, engineering fraternity. They are Nolan Adams, engineering freshman from Clay Center, and Amoret Sills, engineering freshman from Amoret, Mo.
Plymouth
Man
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph.1000
Delicious FISH
AT
DINNERS
DUCK'S
BROILED MAINE LOBSTER SOFT SHELL CRABS DEEP SEA SCALLOPS
Open from 11 a.m. to Midnight
DUCK'S TAVERN
824 Vermont
Don't Fail To See
THE BARTERED BRIDE
presented by
The Light Opera Guild
SEATS AVAILABLE FOR ALL PERFORMANCES
Green Hall Ticket Office
Tonight at 8:15
Fri., Feb. 8 at 8:15
Matinee Thursday, Feb. 7 at 3:15
University Daily Kansan
Page
Kansan Classified Advertising
Tuesday, February 5, 1952
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business office. Journals can be delivered to 3:45 p.m. the day before publication.
day
25 words or less ... 50c
Additional words ... 1e
Three days
75c
2c
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Leave K.C. 7:30 a.m.
Leave KU 5:50 p.m. Highway 10. Call
Bob Breedlove, Indep. 8552 after 8:00
p.m.
2-7
RIDERS: From Kansas City, Mo., 63rd and Brookside, to University. Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 6:30 a.m. Rhea Spicautsky, Jackson 1936. 2-6
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steampath and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether tours or individual finineries. Phone 1-800-764-3551, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. 661.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book your ski trips this summer. Call Miss Glessean at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone
BUSINESS SERVICE
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop. 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
REOPENED for Business: Oread Barber Shop, 1237 Eldert. Hours: 8 to 5.30 PM. Warehouse: 202-764-9980 for Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaning. Charley Coffman and Bernard Borton. 11
TYIPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Beece, 838 Ll. Apt. 4, lifters. Pt. 275J.
TYBING—Theses, term papers, match-
books, letters, etc. Prompt and meet-
a service. Mrs. Hall. 134W. 500 West
Sixth.
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, apt attention. 10 years theses typing史料. Sheields. Middlesboro. 1209 Ohio. Phi 1601.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tf**
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tf
TYPING: Experience in theses term papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten-cil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W, 1915 Tennessee. tt
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment used to provide efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tf
FOR SALE
1AYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff are very friendly, fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Fur Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
CRYSTAL CRAFT serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. A gift card for the midnight. Crystal Cake, 690 Vt. **af**
INDEX your vocabulary and language books with the new Superior Cloth tabs. A set from A to Z for just 10c. Student Union Book Store. 8
Make this your HEADQUARTERS for College Outline Series, Schaum's Outlines, and other study aids. Student Union Book Store. 8
SPECIAL RATES for students on Time,
Life, Fortune, and Newsweek-Magazines.
We take subscriptions to all magazines,
and a rebate to student! Book Store
8
STILL NO INCREASE in price on 140 sheet pad of yellow second sheets. Only 25c at your Student Union Book Store. 8
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands priced to clear. Awaken to music when you need these values at F. F. Goodrich, 929 Mass. B-13
RENTAL TYPEWRITERS! Both new and used, portable and standard models, for $1.00 per week or $3.50 per month. The easy way to better, neater papers. Come in, and try one at the Student Union Book Store. 8
LPMYOUTH '49 Special Deluxe, excel-
cell dealer price. Phone 26154W.
1949 CHEVROLET convertible. Deluxe radio and heater; clean; low mileage; good rubber. Priced to sell. Call 715 or 4238.
FOR RENT
ONE LARGE room with two single beds
for two quiet boys, 1244 La. 2-5
AT 707 WEST 12TH. Double room, with
cooked meals to boys or girls. Call 964-121-
5834.
LARGE COMFORTABLE rooms for boys
and girls. Excellent location
bus line. Phone 1671R. 2-6
SINGLE ROOM, clean and quiet location, close to hill. Only one other roomer; close to bath, furnace heat. 407 West 13th. 2-5
ROOMS FOR UPPER classmen and graduate students. Quiet, comfortable single rooms, close to campus. For sec. and semester. 1131 Ohio. Phone 1842- - 2
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Ends Tonite "SILVER CITY"
THURSDAY
the hands, the hearts, the inspired talents that gave you "Quartet"... now bring you the brilliance of W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM'S
WEDNESDAY
A
Shows Each Day 2:30 7:00 - 9:00
Admission 14c - 60c
---
Trio
"Excellent successor to 'Quartet'!" —Good Housekeeping Magazine
Last Times Tonite "ELEPHANT STAMPEDE" "THE MAGIC FACE"
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Wed. - Thurs. • Box-Office Open Each Day 6:45 p.m.
Trio
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
PEAST CUMMINS
NUCCHAID GREENE
MEET THE MAN BEIND
OPERATION X
Adm.
"PAINTING THE CLOUDS WITH SUNSHINE"
Dennis Morgan Virginia Mayo Gene Nelson
Color by Technicolor
Joe MacDooks "SO YOU WANT TO BE A PAPERHANGER"
DOUBLE ROOM with single beds. Ph 2565M, 1320 Ohio.
VACANCY for boys near campus. 1218
Mississippi. Phone 514. 2-5
TRAILERS FOR RENT, two wheel and four wheels. Have some good used trailer for sale; also a 1938 Ford two-ocar truck. Hatchell Truck Rental, 2-41 North 3rd.
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
1122 Miss Phone 495,
1222 Miss Phone 495.
ROOMS, double and single. See at 1312 Ohio.
8
LOST
APARTMENT for rent Three rooms
$60 a month; utilities paid
1339 Italy
ROOFS for boys, single or double. $15
a month. 1339 Ohio. 6
BOARDERS WANTED! Good food, home cooked! Great companionship at the Nu Sigma Nu house. Very informal. Call 366 today for information. 8
MISCELLANEOUS
PAIR OF horn-rimmed glasses Sunday
afternoon. Call Allie Deem, phone 358-7
FOUND
BLACK, GOLD TOP, Parker 51 pen. Has sentimental value. Name inscribed, Charles H. Dick. Call 3445. Liberal reward. 6
COLLEGE SENIOR wants to buy or rent good trumpet in good condition for use in concerts in the gym. Call Cameron Excellent, care guarantee. Calm Murray at 1713 between 6 and 7 p.m. 2-6
WOMAN's wrist watch found in Memorial Union building. Will owner please write identification to Box 5, University Daily Kansan? 2-5
HELP WANTED
AGGRESSIVE LAW STUDENT—wanted as our law brief representative. Earn $100 to $300 the first part of this semester. For further details, write Terrace Law Publishers. Inc., 829 Margaret Street, Flint, Michigan. 7
MAN'S light-weight top coat. Found in Strong hall. Owner may identify and pay for this ad. Call the Kansan, KU 376. 2-6
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
buyers. Williams. W. John V.
Almen, 3110R
THE MARKET Research Department of Procter and Gamble has several traveling positions open for young women to apply for positions in retail surveys. No selling ages 21-26; ability in simple arithmetic; drivers training; all expenses paid plus salary; training per position; sales manager; Virginia Weiss, Procter & Gamble, Gwynne Bldg, Cincinnati, Ohio, 2-5
NOW!
ENDS
WEDNESDAY
WESTWARD TAYLOR
THE WOMEN DANISE DARGEL
Adventure Packed!
Also Movietone News
Starts Thursday TECHNICOLOR ADVENTURE!
FLAME of ARABY
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
MAUREEN JEFF O'HARA·CHANDLER Granada PHONE 916
Continuous Shows Saturday and Sunday From 1 p.m.
66 Seniors Practice Teaching In 11 Kansas School Systems
Sixty-six education seniors began student teaching in 11 Kansas school systems yesterday. They will teach for seven weeks, then resume classes at the University.
The students and their teaching assignments are:
Topeka: Suzanne Beringer, Pat Kennedy, Margaret Hazard, Ruth Abercrombie, Pat Glover, Doris Lyons, Jane Sample, Norma Strobel, Vida Cummins, Joyce Horalek, Jacqueline Starrett, Ernestine Pulli, Carl Grietries, Nancy Watson, Edwin Anderson, Carl Sandefur, Ada Watens, Marianne Crossy, James Sommerville, Frank Tumken, John Kiley and Betty Knudson.
Kansas City: Susanne Carinder, Violet Aki, Darlene Kerbs, Helen Smith, Maxine LeRow, Barbara Quinn, Archie Brown, Philip Hauser, George Kennard, Sydney Ashton, Barbara Nesch, Joan Pelton, Margaret Rives, Verna Ford, Janice Horn and Veda Russell.
Shawnee Mission: Marjorie Seeley, Donna Hillier, Sue Swartz, Joyce Friesen, Grayce Wycoff, Suzanne Neff and Hugh Eberle.
Highland Park: Mary Marhofer,
Jane Dumire, Shirley Campbell,
Jyn Svensson, Beverly Wilson,
William Schake, Margaret Lundstrom.
Atchison: Robert Geiger, Jean
Taintant, Keith Riggs, and Donald
Mackenzie
Paola: Rita Speckin and R. J Barnes.
Leavenworth: Jo Ann Spring,
Ramona Goering and Patricia
Crawford
Eudora; Marcia Alley.
Eudora: Marcia Alley.
Hickory Grove: Virginia Larson
and Phyllis Griffith.
Prairie Village: Molly Sue Smith Washburn Rural: Eleanor Guy.
2 Boston Papers Praise Jayhawker
the letter was written by Jame M. Small, now living in Lynn, Mass
Two leading Boston papers have praised the 1952 Jayhawker staff for producing "one of the most outstanding annuals" for a college or university, according to a letter received from a former KU student.
"It gives me a great deal of pride to know that the Boston newspaper, recognize occasionally the work an artist who has created for one or more student organizations and publications at KU possess," Small wrote.
"This is a mark of high distinction when Boston recognizes the good qualities of any Midwestern educational institution," the letter said.
He Has Lots Of Time
TODAY
Waltham, Mass.—(U.P.) A 72-year-old Waltham watchmaker says life began for him only two years ago. A self-made artist, he has turned 40 oils—marines, landscapes and portraits—after store hours with his homemade easel and a $5 set of paints and brushes.
80 SAVAGE MINUTES
RIPPED OUT OF A MAN'S
BATTERED BODY . . . A
WOMAN'S TORMENTED SOUL!
RAW,
BLISTERING- DRAMA!
ROBERT RYAN
AUDREY TOTTER
THE
SET-UP
George Alan Wallace
TOBIAS • BAXTER • FORD
AN RKO-RADIO PICTURE
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 5,1952
Chemicals Exposed!
As New Device X-Rays Their Insides
By PHIL NEWMAN
A device capable of telling much about the interior structure of chemical compounds by taking pictures was installed recently in the University geology department.
the apparatus-called an x-ray
device, was operated under the
Reserve foundation.
"The arrangement of atoms is distinctive in each separate substance," Robert M. Dreyer, professor of geology explained.
"When x-rays pass through the substance we are examining they are bounced or defracted off its atoms and recorded."
"The recording is usually photographic, but it can also be made by means of a mechanical recorder," he said.
When the recording is done photographically, a small, circular camera resembling an unusually shallow coffee can is used. The film for the camera is in a long roll and resembles recording tape.
"The resulting pattern of x-ray lines not only permits us to identify the compound, but tells us a great deal about the substance's internal structure," Professor Dreyer said.
The substance may be identified in either the raw or reagent form.
This means that either material in the laboratory-prepared form or in the form it occurs in the natural state can be used in the device.
The defractor, made by General Electric, has been placed in a specially-constructed room in the basement of Lindley hall.
Cost of the apparatus was "between $10,000 and $18,000," according to J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering.
The device was purchased primarily for research, but next fall it will be used in an advanced course in mineralogy.
A training program for teachers of the deaf, established at the University last year, has been accredited by the Conference of Executives of the American Schools for the Deaf, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy has announced.
KU Accredited To Teach Deaf
KU thus becomes one of 13 schools in the nation certified for this type of work. Accreditation is granted only after an evaluation of the courses offered, number of hours of practice teaching, and observation of the instructors and their qualifications.
Miss June Miller, educational director of the hearing and speech department of the KU Medical center, is in charge of the program. The training is a cooperative offering of the department of hearing and speech at the KU Medical center, and the Kansas School for the Deaf at Oathe.
The one-year program leads to the master's degree. The work is taken at the Medical center in Kansas City and at Olathe. Prerequisite for the training is a bachelor's degree in education.
Sophomores Provide Entertainment At Half
A beauty and three beasts provided the sophomore entertainment during the half at the Colorado-Kansas game Monday.
Lynden Goodwin, College sophomore, was master of ceremonies for the mock beauty contest between classes. Freshman, junior and senior contestants were represented by boys in tacky clothes.
The glamorous sophomore winner of the contest was Kay Lambert, College sophomore. She received an oversized trophy for a reward.
The entertainment ended with the sophomore yell "What's the score?
WEATHER
Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Few snow flurries in the northeast tonight. Cooler tonight and in southeast portion Wednesday. Lows tonight 25-30. Highs Wednesday in 40's.
A WORLD OF RECORDING
NEW GEOLOGY X-RAY UNIT—The University geology department has installed an x-ray defraction machine that gives information conhas installed an x-ray defraction machine that gives information con-Benham, secretary to Prof. J. O. Maloney, is shown looking over the instrument. Kansan photo by Al Marshall
instrument.—Kansan photo by Al Marshall.
KULanguage Arts Curriculum Receives Recognition Twice
The University language arts curriculum for education majors, a combination of the traditional speech and English majors, has received national recognition and publicity twice in the past year.
"The California Journal of Secondary Education" published at Stanford University gave a complete description of the program in the April 1951 issue.
"College English," publication of the national council of teachers of English, conducted a national survey of the teacher training program in English. Programs of three institutions were considered outstanding. They were the University of Minnesota; the University of Iowa, and KU. The results of this survey were published in the December 1951 issue.
The program was initiated at KU in the fall of 1950 under the leadership of Dean George B. Smith, of the School of Education and Oscar M. Haugh, assistant professor of education.
The outstanding feature of the program is that instead of turning out traditional English teachers,
27 Students Take Honors
Thirteen seniors, or 5.6 per cent of the class, equalled or exceeded the required 2.30 grade point average.
Fourteen juniors, or 9.3 per cent of the class, equalled or bettered the 2.20 standard for that class.
Robert Lewis, a senior from Lawrence, and Frederick O'Brien, a junior from Warensburg, Mo. made the only all "A" grades. Dean Axie praised Lewis for consistently making superior grades while dividing the school and managing the retail store of the Barteldes Seed company here.
The names of 27 students appear on the fall semester honor roll of the School of Business, according to Dean Leonard Axe.
Donald Little, Kenneth Ochs, Joseph Scudder, Kenneth Stephenson, Virginia Thomson and Winthrop Wyman.
Seniors: Paul Arrowood, Paul Berkley, Donald Gardner, Eugene Haley, William Howard Jr., Keith Kelly, Robert Lewis.
The School of Business honor roll:
Juniors: Neal Anderson, James Burgess, Robert Garrity, Cornell Hall, William Johnson, Walter Langford, Richard McCall.
Gordon Moore, Frederick O'Brien,
Howard Schundt, William Smith,
Oliver Tarr, William Tobler, and
Virgil Wenger.
training is also received in the speech arts.
The School of Education has instituted a graduate training program in English-education. English, speech, and journalism teachers can combine subject matter studies with courses in methods. It is now possible to pursue this program for a doctor of education and doctor of philosophy.
"This double-header program has enabled the School of Education to better serve the needs of Kansas by providing well-rounded candidates for teaching positions," Dr. Haugh said.
Flu Epidemic Faces Haskell
With one out of seven students at Haskell institute ill with severe colds or virus infections, the situation has reached the proportions of an epidemic, Dr. W. O. Nelson said yesterday.
There are about 100 cases of this type of flu or gripe at the institute. Some two dozen students are in the school hospital while others with milder cases were confined to the campus over the weekend. All school activities were cancelled including the junior class barn dance which was to have been held Saturday.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University health services, said that 16 University students are confined to Watkins hospital with colds, but this number is about the seasonal average and apparently no epidemic threatens the school.
Representatives from 12 colleges in Nebraska, Missouri and Kansas met here for the Student Union regional conference Jan. 25 and 26.
50 Attend Area Union Conference
The meetings were held in the Union and were attended by approximately 20 students and 30 staff members.
Two officers of the Union Activities committee, Damon Simpson, vice-president and Frank Norris, treasurer led the student group in discussions of student union activities.
L. E. Woolley, director of the Union and Duane Lake of Nebraska university led the staff members in discussions of finances, programs, co-ordination and service projects.
News Roundup
UN Votes To Postpone Korea Debate Until Truce
Paris—(U.P.)—The United Nations General Assembly voted overwhelmingly today, at its final session, to postpone any debate on Korea until an armistice had been concluded—or until Communist aggression makes stiffer military action necessary.
aggression makes stiffer military design. The three-months session of the plenary body of the UN adjourned at 7:13 a.m. (EST) after killing by a vote of 51 to 5, with two countries abstaining, a Russian attempt to force the Korean issue into consideration.
Meanwhile in Korea, negotiators quickly settled more minor details of a Korean armistice today, but the United Nations command warned that the Reds still haven't shown a "real willingness for a fair peace."
A "voice of the UN command" broadcast said Communist concessions so far have been a "step in the right direction. . . but there is still a long way to go."
British Protest Alleged Attack
Buenos Aires—(U.P.)-Britain has protested to Argentina against Argentine naval forces allegedly firing upon a British landing party in Hope Bay.
The Argentine foreign office said the protest was presented in Buenos Aires Monday by British Charge D'Affaires Richard Alba.
The Argentine ministry quoted the British note as saying the British reserved their "rights over that part of Antarctica."
The Ministry said it would say nothing about the incident because "it lacks significance."
Larned—(U.P.)-Officials at the Larned State hospital said today that Dr. Hugh Hope, convicted of narcotics violations, has been dismissed from the staff, effective Feb. 15.
The former Hunter, Kan., physician had been serving as a "temporary physician" at the Great Bend annex of the Larned hospital.
Larned Hospital Physician Fired
The committee held its first closed hearing on the peace trend and associated Pacific security pacts this morning, but spokesmen said it probably would not vote today.
Mrs. Mary Lois Jones, who lives with her husband on a farm 10 miles northwest of Marshall, Mo., was arraigned before a U.S. commissioner here Monday.
One postcard which she sent to Mr. Truman said, "I hope someone kills you," U.S. secret service agent Jackson N. Krill testified. "I'd rather be a slave of the Kremlin than a slave of big business, big landholders and big city racketeers . . ." she wrote in one letter.
Kansas City—(U.P.)A 40-year-old farm wife who wrote President Truman she hoped he would be "hit in the head with a club" was held in jail here today on charges of sending "scurrilous and defamatory" matter through the mails.
In making the announcement, Dr. J. T. Naramore, hospital superintendent, said the action preceded a protest by a group of women representing 46 women's clubs in the Great Bend area.
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea—(U.P.)—United Nations we planes in nearly 600 sorties attacked targets throughout North Korea today, destroying railroad lines, supply centers, ammunition depots and other targets.
Members wanted some wording in the treaty that would pull it clear of the Yalta question and still not constitute a "reservation" which would have to be approved by all 49 nations signing the agreement.
Washington— (U.P.) The Senate foreign relations committee sought today to erase opposition to the Japanese peace treaty by emphasizing that the pact does not affirm the Yalta agreement.
Senate Seeks Treaty Clarification
Land-based Marine planes joined those of the Air Force in attacks which stretched from West to East coasts in "operation strangle" designed to keep the Communists from building up their front line strength.
UN Planes Demolish Red Targets
Anti-Truman Letter-Writer Jailed
Harriman To Confer With Experts
Washington—(U.P.)Mutual Security Chief W. Averelt Harriman left by air for Paris today to confer with experts of the 11 other North Atlantic treaty powers on defense goals for this year.
The Paris conference will try to get agreement on recommendations to be presented to the North Atlantic treaty meeting scheduled to open at Lisbon Feb. 16. Their search is for a balance between military necessity and Europe's ability to help pay the bill.
Truman Leaves Name On N.H. Ballot BY THE UNITED PRESS
President Truman announced he will permit his name to remain on the New Hampshire presidential preference primary ballot. Sen. Estes Kefauver (D.-Tenn.) also is on the New Hampshire ballot. Mr. Trump did not announce that he is a candidate for re-election.
Kansas State Historical Society
Topeka, Ks.
Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 6, 1952
49th Year
No. 83
King George VI Dead; Elizabeth On Way Home
London-(U.P.)-King George VI died peacefully in his sleep today and his 25-year-old daughter Elizabeth, now Britain's queen, started home from East Africa to assume her throne.
The 56-year-old monarch, sovereign of one-fourth the world's population and land surface, was found dead in his bed by his valet at about 30 a.m. (2:30 a.m. EST).
No announcement was made as to the cause of the death but medical circles speculated it was coronary thrombosis.
At 5 p.m. (1 p.m. CST), the Privy council, a 200-member body made up of the greatest of Britons, met at St. James palace to proclaim the accession to the throne of Elizabeth.
At the same hour they met. Elizabeth boarded a plane in Kenya to start her journey home as queen.
Elizabeth broke down and wept when her husband and Prince Consort, Philip, tenderly broke the news to her of her father's death and told her she was queen. But she recovered quickly to give personal orders for the trip home.
Elizabeth flew from Kenya to Entebbe in Uganda where she and Philip will board a British Overseas Airways Argonaut. She is expected to arrive in London at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow (12:30 p.m. CST).
News of the King's death was kept within the royal family and the highest government circles until Elizabeth, in a gay holiday mood at the Royal lodge in Mombasa, Kenya, could be informed.
King George's wife, Queen Elizabeth; his younger daughter, Princess Margaret; and his grandchildren, Prince Charles—now heir to the throne—and Princess Anne all were at Sandringham when the king died.
The Queen was reported by a member of her entourage to be grief stricken and almost prostrate at the death of her husband.
New Dorm Ready Soon
Workmen are now moving in the furnishings. The students are expected to begin moving in a week or two.
Stephenson hall, men's new scholarship dormitory, will be finished within the next two weeks.
The new dorm, located on the east slope of the Hill, was given to the KU Endowment association by Mrs. C.R. Stephenson of Kansas City, Mo., in memory of her husband. The dorm will house 52 men.
The brick building, accented with the white trim will have a large living room with a fireplace. Suites are for four students each and will include a study room and two bedrooms.
Spokesmen for the Martin K. Eby Construction company said that two other dormitories located south of Stenhjem are also near completion.
The hall will be operated by the students, who will do the work of cleaning and cooking under the supervision of a housemother.
Campus Affairs To Sponsor School Spirit Discussions
School spirit will be the subject of a discussion to be held by the campus affairs committee at 7:15 tonight in 222 Strong hall.
Lou Ann Smee, college sophomore and Howard Cole, college freshman, will be co-chairmen of the meeting.
The campus affairs committee is a discussion group without officers or members. All meetings are open to students and faculty.
1950.
MET STAR TO APPEAR HERE TONIGHT—Cesare Siepi, Metropolitan bass soloist, will sing at Hoch auditorium at 8:20 p.m. today in another Concert Course presentation. ID cards will admit students.
Pakistan Director To Address Convocation 3 p.m. Thursday
Dr. Khalifa Abdul Hakim, director of the Institute of Islamic Culture in Lahore, Pakistan, will discuss "Islamic Culture" at 3 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium.
Dr. Hakim is the first representative of the new state of Pakistan to speak here.
The importance of the lecture is emphasized by Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College who said that a knowledge of the Moslem sphere of influence in today's world is important.
Dr. Hakim was dean of the faculty of arts in Osmania university in Hyderabad before taking his present position. He is noted as a linguist, and has written books in Urdu (Hindustani) and English, the most recent being "Islamic Ideology."
Local Artist's Work Exhibited In Topeka
Sixty paintings by a former KU instructor, Gerald Davis, were on exhibition recently at the Topeka High school auditorium.
Before coming to the University to teach in the architecture department, Davis was an art instructor at the University of Illinois. He is now a private artist in Lawrence.
Several of the paintings are of the Wakarusa valley and of scenes near Lawrence.
Engineers Should Apply For Grants
Students in the School of Engineering and Architecture should apply immediately for fellowships from the General Electric Educational fund.
Starting this year, the General Electric company will make a grant of $1,200 to the college or university where the fellowship winner does his graduate study.
The amount of each fellowship granted shall be $1400 for an unmarried fellow and $2,100 for a married fellow.
This grant will be applicable to expenses of the fellowship including tuition, equipment and other costs.
Partly cloudy and warmer tonight and Thursday. Low tonight in 20's northwest to 30 southeast. High Thursday in 50's.
Prof. Don G. Wilson, chairman of the department of electrical engineering, will supply application blanks for engineering students who wish to apply.
WEATHER
ASC Action Taken On Six Proposals
Jayhawker Office Announces Hours
The new Jayhawker office, in 211 Journalism building, will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday beginning Thursday.
Covers and first and second issues may be picked up in the office at these times. Subscriptions may still be purchased for $5.25.
There are still hours open to students who wish to work on the secretarial staff. They may sign up any time this week by leaving their name and hours when they can work in the Jayhawker office.
There will be a meeting of the new secretarial staff at 10 a.m. Saturday in the Jayhawker office. All students who have signed up to work are urged to attend the meeting to learn of their duties.
Art Educators To Meet Friday
Action on six proposals was taken Tuesday night in the first All Student Council meeting of the spring semester.
The first two lectures will be Friday, the third Saturday morning.
Miss Edith Henry, supervisor of art in the Denver elementary schools will be guest lecturer. Miss Henry's three discussions will be "Art Materials and the Learning Situation," "Art in the Lives of Children" and "The Role of the Art Supervisor."
Three instruction periods and study of a special exhibition will be the program of the art education conference Friday and Saturday at the University.
The exhibit will be set up on the second floor of Strong hall. It shows the close integration between creative and mental growth of the child.
The interrelations are shown by sets of outside and inside panels. The outside panels are a presentation of the creative development of the child in its characteristic stages. The other panels are an analysis of the various phases of growth as seen in the creative product.
KU Graduate To Head 'Y'
Gaston, who was president of the organization last semester, was asked to take the advisory position, which has been vacant since Dave Riggs resigned, at a cabinet meeting Jan. 31.
Irvin Gaston, graduate student, has been appointed executive secretary for the YMCA.
22 To Attend Radiology Course
Jack Kay, college senior and former vice-president, will act as president until new officers are elected in April.
Second semester plans include an all membership meeting Thursday, Feb. 14, and a cabinet retreat and trip to Kansas City Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 23 and 24.
Coach Forrest C. Allen will speak on "The Place of Varsity Athletics in Education," at the Vice-Presidents' breakfast at 9:30 a.m. Saturday in the west wing of the Union cafeteria.
A guest faculty of 22 for the postgraduate course in radiology Monday to Wednesday, Feb. 25-27 at the University Medical Center in Kansas City was announced by Harold G. Ingham, director of the extension program in medicine.
The visiting lecturers, most of them members of the Kansas City Radiological society of practicing radiologists in Kansas, will assist eight regular members of the KU faculty in the program.
Dr. Robert D. Moreton, Temple,
Tex.; Dr. Robert R. Newell, San
Francisco, and Dr. Harold O. Peterson, Minneapolis, Minn., will be visiting speakers.
Other guest lecturers include: Dr. Willis L. Beller, Topeka; Dr. Ralph E. Hines, Dr. Newman C. Nash, Dr. Anthony F. Rossitt, Dr. James R. Stark and Dr. Charles M. White, all of Wichita; Dr. L.K. Chont, Winfield; Dr. Leland F. Glaser Hutchinson; Dr. Warren S. Peiper, Arkansas City; Dr. Abraham Wolkin, Wadsworth.
Dr. Lewis G, Allen Jr., Kansas City, Ks; Dr. Samuel B, Chapman, Dr. Hillard Cohen, Dr. David S, Dann, Dr. Kenneth C. Hollweg, Dr.
Ira H. Lockwood, Dr. Sidney Rubin,
Dr. Arthur B. Smith and Dr. John
W. Walker, all of Kansas City, Mo.
Ingham will be the three-day program will be a brief summary of radiology and the diagnosis and treatment of all branches of medicine and surgery.
The Kansas City Radiological society has arranged a dinner Tuesday, Feb. 26 at the Terrace club in the New Brotherhood building in Kansas City, Kans. Dr. Robert R. Newell, a professor of medicine at Stanford university, will be the speaker.
- Vacancies were declared in representative districts II (School of Engineering) and III (Schools of Business, Fine Arts, Education, Pharmacy, and Medicine). A woman will represent district II, and a woman, district III. Petitions for vacancies will be accepted at the next meeting.
James Logan, ASC president, said that the chancellor has approved the plan for a student labor board. As soon as four students are appointed to serve, the board will begin functioning. Duties of the board will be designated at the next meeting.
Other actions taken by the council were:
1. Decided on April 26-27 as the best possible dates for a leadership conference to be attended by the old and newly-elected ASC officers. The conference is sponsored by the Kansas Student Government association and will be held at Kansas State College.
2. Announced that the Big Seven Student Government organization proposes presentation of a yearly trophy to the Big Seven school with the best all-around athletic record.
3. Voted to have a full-page picture of the ASC members in the Jauhauser.
4. Learned from Dean Werries, ASC treasurer, that the Council has a balance of $174.86 on hand.
Plans on methods of revising the ASC constitution were heard by the Council. A committee headed by Virginia Mackey, journalism junior, was appointed to propose a plan of change in Bill I which deals with the organization of the Council.
Others on the committee are Chester Lewis, second year law student, and Thomas Murphy, Warren Morris and Donovan Hull, College seniors.
Those absent from the meeting were: Lyle Anderson, Robert Casad, Christine Johnson, James Martin, Victoria Rosenwald, Jacqueline Bayliss, William Stinson, and William Hawkey.
Day Of Prayer Set For Feb.17
The Student World Day of Prayer, part of a world-wide religious movement, will be commemorated in the Trinity Lutheran church at 7:15 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 17, Eugene Brubaker, education junior and chairman of the program announced today.
All students are invited to attend this interdenominational service.
A report from Philip Kassebaum,
College junior, outlined plans for a
Religious Emphasis week, Saturday
to Friday, March 22 to 28 during a
student religion council meeting
Tuesday.
Westminster fellowship representatives suggested that three councils, Protestant, Catholic and Jewish, be set up. Each council would have a chairman who would act as the group's representative to a Student Religious council.
SRC delegates were asked to discuss the plan in their respective organizations. Definite action will be taken by the council before election of officers in April.
Memorial Carillon Recital To Be Given This Evening
A group of numbers will be heard at 7 p.m. today on the carillon.
"Calm As The Night" (Bohm);
"The Minstrel Boy" (Irish folk song);
selections from the De Gruytters Book, including "Gigue" (Couperin), "Conten Dans" and Minuet (Anon) and Minuet (Baustetter); "Romanza," from "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik" (Mozart);
Eude for carillon (Menotti), and "Crimson and the Blue."
Make Proctor Appointments
Students enrolled in Western Civilization who have not yet arranged for a proctorial appointment this semester must do so in 9 Strong annex C, by Monday, Feb. 11.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 6, 1957
Daily Kansan Editorials
Stories Lose Freedom For Daily Californian
Last week the board of regents of the University of California directed that an advisory board be set up to supervise editorial policies of the Daily Californian, student newspaper at the school. Thus, the 40-year editorial independence of the paper was ended.
The regents' move resulted from a general tendency to give "a disproportionate amount of space to some minority groups," and from two articles in particular which were called pro-Russian. Both articles presented the views of students who visited Russia last summer, and pictured life behind the Iron Curtain in a favorable light.
No one accused the Californian or anyone on its staff of pro-Communist leanings. Instead, the paper's policies were attributed to the "traditional excesses in student journalism."
Despite these "excesses" the school administration in the past had refused to tread on the paper's freedom. This brings up the question of just how far a newspaper may go before it begins to abuse its freedom.
Sometimes it is difficult to determine whether a paper has abused its freedom sufficiently to warrant control or has been an innocent victim of those who would suppress legitimate news and comment.
It is always sad to see a newspaper—student or otherwise—subjected to supervision by an outside agency. It not only establishes a dangerous precedent but in some cases is a reflection on the judgment of the persons responsible for the production of the paper.
Some editors would defend the right of a paper to say whatever it pleases, no matter how much bad taste and irresponsibility it displays. Fortunately, most newsmen aren't in this category. Most will defend press freedom vigorously, but they also will recognize the responsibility of their position and meet that responsibility without sacrificing any of their freedom.
Every campus has various groups all hell-bent on rearranging the world in general—and the United States in particular—according to some pet theory of government. It is here that campus "liberals" cease to be liberal anymore. They get so immersed in their particular panacea that they will brook no interference, or even argument, from anyone who feels differently. It is in such situations that college newspapers very often start defying all the rules of good taste and reason.
True, there are excesses. Some student journalists seem to delight in treading the thin line between good and bad taste, and defy anyone to do anything about it. This practice probably is a product of the tendency of youth to go to extremes in whatever direction it happens to be headed at a given moment.
Certainly we are not in a position to pass judgment on the Daily Californian. But in California, where legislative committees virtually scour the countryside looking for evidences of Communism, it would seem that the Daily Californian was indulging in a bit of such defiance. —J.W.Z.
Titles are being accepted for next year's film series, Raymond Nichols, chairman of the film committee, said today.
Suggestions should be in before Sunday, Feb. 10. They may be given to Mr. Nichols or Donald Stewart, College senior, and Van Rothrock, business junior, student representatives on the committee.
Suggestions Open Lawrence Couple For Film Titles Give Painting
A 17th century Dutch painting, "The Ray," by van Byren has been presented to the Museum of Art by Mr. and Mrs. Simon Hurwitz of Lawrence.
Mr. Nichols said that in spite of the impossibility of obtaining some of the releases suggested by students, the committee would do all in its power to get the films the students want.
John Maxon, director of the museum, said that van Byren is ranked the foremost painter of fish pictures in the history of Dutch art.
Why are people trying to take the guts out of intercollegiate sports?
You just couldn't wait to jump on the bandwagon, could you? Everybody today is trying to take sport out of sports! What's wrong with Gardner and Allen drumming up a little pre-game interest? It's in the best tradition of sports. Every day some committee or another meets to discuss why there isn't any school spirit on this campus. I'll tell them why: it's because the things which used to foster school spirit—the feuds, fights, statue paintings, et al—have gotten "civilized" right out of sports. Today we clap almost harder when the members of the opposing basketball team are introduced than we do for our own boys!
The picture, which comes from an English collection, is rated by Professor Maxon as being of "very fine quality." "We are much indebted to Mr. and Mrs. Hurwitz for their fine gift," he said.
Dear Sir:
The last few Kansans have carried tea-and-toast editorials by the editor-in-chief, Jack Zimmerman, and his associate, Joe Taylor, in which Gardner and Allen were put way down for their argument and Moon Mullins exalted for eating humble bread in the recruiting scandal.
Everybody today is screaming that college sports are getting too professional. If they are, it is because people like you and your assistant are taking the guts out of the traditional rivalries by sitting on anyone who shows a little spirit (like Gardner and Allen). I say, more power to them, worthy representatives of the days when college sports were more than tea parties with professional entertainers giving the guests a little show! And less power to you, pale-faced advocates of a dry, spiritless world!
Reader Prefers Sports With 'Guts'
University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the Ad Room UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn,
Associated with The New York Times, is a member of the National Advertising Service 420 Madison Avenue, New York City.
Letters:
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-In-Chief ... Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants ... Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
Edwards Assistants ... James Snider, Joe Tayler
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahm
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman,
Joe Lostelie, Jim Pawers
City Editor ... Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phi Nedman,
Jerry Renner, Katrina Swetz
Telegraph Editor ... Charles Burch
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Max Thompson
Society Editor ... Dianne Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Pauline Patterson
Sports Editor ... Jocke Jones
News Adviser ... Victor J. Danilov
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager ... Emory Williams
National Advertising Manager ... Virginia Johnston
Circulation Manager ... Ted Barbara
Classified Advertising Manager ... Elaine Mitchell
Promotion Manager ... Phil Wilcox
Business Adviser ... R. W. Doores
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence), published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1870
Name Withheld by Request.
Campus police announce that they will tow away illegally parked cars of faculty members. This only goes to show that the faculty has pull in everything around here.
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"Hillbilly Clyde Lovellette, the biggest man in radio," has begun his own regular series and as yet we've not heard anyone suggest that the station cut operational expenses by using him for its tower.
Time' Not First To Write About Younger Generation
Our favorite coed, Iva Latepaper, says she would like to see the light opera performance here on campus this week but doesn't think she can stand the blood shed. After all, "The Battered Bride" is a pretty grusome title.
No wonder men don't go into the teaching field these days. A news release on mid-year job prospects tells of "men starting at $300 a year and women at $2,500."
A news story begins with the words "Informed quarters said ." which only goes to prove that money talks.
"Tell her I'm tall, dark, and in the upper third of my class."
L. E. Woolley resigns as manager of the Student Union book store and no longer can students complain about having the "Woolley pulled over their eyes."
All older generations have one tradition in common: their habit of talking about younger generations. Time magazine recently carried on the tradition.
Recent statement heard from the senior class president: "I think I'll go out tonight and raise a little Hull."
Time asked the question. "Is is possible to paint a portrait of an entire generation?" What followed were four pages about "The Younger Generation"—a portrait in brilliant color.
Below are six Time quotations plus an equal number of quotions about other younger generations of the '20's and '30's. The result is that Time's colors become slightly blurred.
Time: Today's generation, either through fear, passivity or conviction, is ready to conform.
Maxine Davis in "The Lost Generation," 1936: This lack of revolt is more ominous than active radicalism.
- * *
- * *
American Mercury, 1931: Most American men, I believe, drink less today than they did 10 years ago and a great deal less than they drank in 1900.
Time: Novelists like Truman Capote, William Styron and Fredrick Beuchner are precocious technicians, but their books have the air of suspecting that life is long on treachery, short on rewards.
Time: The younger generation seems to drink less.
\* \* \*
Saturday Review of Literature, 1935: It can be said without much likelihood of contradiction that the middle generation of American writers have defeatist written on their foreheads.
\* \* \*
Time: Educators across the U.S. compain that young people seem to have no militant beliefs. They do not speak out for anything.
New York Times, 1920: Why are college boys so inert, so seldom rebels or anarchs?
Time: There is no formal religious revival among the young Americans. God . . . is still a vaguely comforting thought, theology a waste of time, and denominations beside the point. To large numbers of them, religion is still merely an ethical code. But God has once more become a factor in the younger generation's thoughts.
Outlook, 1925: That most young people, and especially that growing number of them who are finding their way to and through college, are comparatively indifferent to many of the questions that have divided the churches into camps and factions is apparent. To some this appears a sign of religious indifference. It may be indeed, a sign of indifference, to doctrine and dogma, but it is not a sign of indifference to religion.
* *
Time: But youth's ambitions have shrunk. Few youngsters today want to mine diamonds in South Africa, ranch in Paragguay.
Literary Digest, 1936: Ambitions have been humbled; enterprise has been chilled.
News From Other Campuses
Chimes For Fourth Child
Students strolling around campus of Washington U., were stopped in their tracks recently by the chimes, which were giving out with, "I Want a Girl. Just. . Rock-a-Bye Baby." The chimer was heralding the birth of his fourth child.
Schools Admit 16½ Year-Olds
In an experiment aimed at providing two years of liberal education in college prior to national military service, the universities of Chicago, Columbia, Wisconsin, and Yale this autumn admitted 50 male students who were under the age of 163
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Page 3
Part-Time Job Prospects Are Bright For KU Women
Wednesday, February 6.1951 University.Daily Kanson
Prospects for part-time student employment for women are good, but part-time jobs for men are more scarce, the employment bureau said today.
According to Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, there is a particular demand for women who can take shorthand. Full time secretarial jobs are also available.
A need for women office workers continues from last fall, Miss Peterson said. The shortage is mainly a result of inconvenient class schedules and lack of training.
In addition to office jobs, there are several serving positions in dormitories available which is unusual for this time of year. "On the whole the women's employment picture is good. Most job requests are met." Miss Peterson said.
Men's jobs are not as plentiful a women's. However, it is possible for a man to get a job if he really need
Pharmacy Student Given $100 Award
A $100 scholarship has been awarded to Roy H. Muntzert, pharmacy senior, according to Dean J. Allen Reese of the School of Pharmacy.
Muntzert will use the scholarship during the spring semester and will receive a bachelor of science degree in pharmacy in June.
During the five semesters Muntzert has attended the University, he has been on the honor roll three times. He is president of Rho Chi honorary pharmacy society.
This scholarship was established by the American Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education.
This grant is awarded to juniors or seniors in the School of Pharmacy who have grades averaging "B" or better.
The Mid-Western Art camp will hold its first session at the University from Sunday, June 15, to Thursday, June 26.
Art Camp Session To Begin In June
This summer session will be sponsored by the School of Fine Arts and managed by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts.
The Art camp is affiliated with the Mid-Western Music camp, which will be held at the University this summer for the 15th year.
All courses will be adjusted according to the needs of the individual. Subjects of study include design, painting, jewelry and silversmithing, ceramics, weaving, drawing, cartooning and sculpture.
Recreational activities, such as softball, tennis, golf, pingpong and swimming, will be featured.
The camp will publish a yearbook which will need students to work in the fields of advertising, sports, art, twisting, photography and humor.
For information about the camp write Marjorie Whitney, professor of design, who is art camp director.
one, Mrs. Virginia Matthew, secretary to the dean of men, said.
Many men students ask for jobs that require only a few working hours a week and pay top wages. Few jobs of this type are available.
At present, men can get part-time jobs as fountain workers, waiters, janitors, bellboys and window washers. The main reason for the seasonal scarcity is that most employers have found workers to fill all positions by this time.
2 Students Join Radio Workshop
Caroline West, College sophomore, and Frank LaBan, College junior, were accepted as Radio work shop players at a trout Jan. 31.
For the first time, the Radio players will present two dramatic productions a week.
Mrs. Ruby LeNeva Motta, script writer-producer for KFKU, said the two students must meet these three requirements to become Radio players: Be in three radio plays, show quality and versatile voices and be submitted and approved by old Radio player members.
Mrs. Motta said Miss West showed rood diction and a good voice.
One of the productions, "Flying Carpet," a dramatization of literature for children in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades, is a continuation from last semester.
LaBan was good in imagery, Mrs. Motta said, and in addition showed an ability to speak Spanish, Italian, Scotch and French dialects.
The other production, "Prairie Footprints," an authentic account of Kansas history, is new this semester. It also is dramatized for children in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades.
KFKU To Present New History Drama
A new dramatic production,
"Prairie Footprints," written and
produced by Mrs. Ruby LeNeva
Motta, script writer-producer for
KFUK, will begin at 2:30 p.m. today on
KFKU.
The 15-minute program will give an authentic presentation of actual Kansas history. Mrs. Motta said the people, but that people make events.
The first play is concerned with three incidents on Lewis and Clark's expedition.
The first incident takes place on a Missouri hilltop at the junction of the Missouri and Kansas rivers and tells of the explorers being able to look down the river and see an old camp of Kansas Indians through Lewis' field glasses.
The second incident tells of an escape with a bear,
The last incident tells of the two men trying to reach the Shoshome Indians to get guides and horses across the continental divide.
Mrs. Motta said Kansas teachers have responded enthusiastically to the idea of a history series.
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Dean Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion gave a series of lectures at the Interdenominational Bible institute in Beatrice, Neb., Jan, 26 to 29.
The lectures were on four New Testament books, First and Second Corinthians, Galatians, Romans and Philippians.
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Another series of four lectures entitled "Common Sense Religion" is based on the "wisdom books" of the Bible. These lectures are being given by the country's national country church in Kansas City, Mo. They are held Thursday nights.
Gets 30 Days For Sleeping
Future lectures will be on Feb. 7, 14 and 21.
Phone 616
Detroit—(U.P.)-Jack Dobbins, cold and tired, found a heated garage and went to sleep in one of the cars inside. Dobbins, had chosen the police garage as a lodging. Found guilty of being intoxicated, he was given 30 days.
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Donkey Makes Same Noise No Matter How You Spell It!
Chicago—(U.R.)—Dr. Austin L. Rand, curator of birds at the Chicago Museum of Natural History, got to wondering how animals sound to persons who speak foreign languages.
He asked Spanish and German colleagues to write the sounds of some familiar creatures, with these results:
| English | German | Spanish |
|---|
| Donkey | he-haw | Iha! Iha! | Ajal Ajal! |
| Cat | meow | miau | miau |
| Duck | quack, quack | wack, wack | cua, cua |
| Owl | Who | hu | ju |
| Cow | moo | muh, muh | meu, muuu |
| Pig | grunt, oink | ouik, ouik | grup-grup, wink |
| Frog | croak | quak, quak | cruac, croac |
| Rooster | cock-a-doodle-doc | Kickkerki | quiquiriguiii |
| Dog | bow-wow | wau, wau | guan, guan, guan |
Rand said most of the English, German and Spanish words sound allike, "but the writing certainly looks like something else."
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 6, 1952
KU Track Squad To Meet K-State
The Kansas track team will break open the 1952 indoor season Saturday night, as Coach Easton's Jayhawks meet Kansas State in the first track meet ever held in the Wildcat's new fieldhouse.
The dual meet will begin with the field events slated to start at 8 p.m. and the track events opening with the mile-run at 8:30.
Coach Easton, famed for his great runners in the track events, expects the team as a whole to be greatly improved this year, if some of the younger men come around as expected.
In the mile, Wes Santee of Ashland, will be KU's main hope. The fleet-footed sophomore is one of the best running prospects in Kansas track history, and should do great things this season in both the indoor and outdoor meets.
Herb Semper, the national cross
said that he should clear 13-feet. Another potential vaulter is Bob Kay.
KANSAS
20
country champion, will carry the weight in the two-mile, but will have competition in Thurlow from Kansas State.
In the high-jump, the Jayhawks will be represented by Buzz Frasier and Bob Smith. They should add points in the field where KU has never been too strong.
Don Smith, a junior from Wichita, and John Riederer will be the Kansas men in the 440.
Loy Kobee will run with Santee in the mile and Dave Bitner and Dick Wilson will run with Semper in the two-mile.
The Kansas team will have their best competition in the field events. The state captains have their best men in these events and should give Kansas trouble.
The high-jump hopes for Kansas were given a blow when Johnny Johnson, Coach Easton's finest prospect, cut a tendon with a pick during Christmas vacation.
Frasier and Smith will also be the KU hopes in the broad-iump.
In the pole-vault Jim Floyd is looking better than he has at any time in the past, and Coach Easton
Bob DeVinney will lead the Jay-hawks in the 60-yard high and low hurdles, but there will also be two other men in the events which could help the Kansas cause. Don Woodson from Mission and Adolph Mueller, a freshman from Leavenworth, should give DeVinney some help.
Rain Causes Horsing Around
Easton is particularly pleased by his prospects in the shot. Larry Marsh, Galen Fiss and Merlin Gish will be the top men.
Memphis, Tenn.— (U.P.) —G. Winn telephoned his neighbor to come get his horse off Winn's front porch. Winn said the animal climbed up on his porch when it started to rain.
Chile's most popular dance is the "danzas de panelo" in which the man and the woman dance separately.
A number of football players are now on the Kansas track team, and Coach Easton is particularly pleased with the performance of many of these boys.
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743 Mass. Call 675
lege (Md.) 58
Wake Forest 64, Davidson 63
South Carolina 78, George Washington 76
Princeton 59, Temple 56
Yale 76, Springfield (Mass.) 71
Rider 83, Philadelphia Textile 47
Kings college 84, Lycoming 75
American U. 78, Washington col-
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Cage Scores
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William & Mary 70, North Carolina state.6L
Howard 66, Mississippi college 62
Jacksonville state 64, Chattanooga 49
West Liberty State Teachers 72,
Fairmont state 53
Fairmont state 60
Mayland 60, Baltimore U. 58
Augusta (Ill.) 60, Knox 51
Bradley 67, Wichita 48
Chico 61, Minita 56
Defiance 79, Findlay 68
Gust. Adolphus 55, MacAlerst 51
Indiana Central 67, Hanover 69
Youngstown 68, LaSalle 57
Wartburg 70, Loras 61
Millinik u. 66, Washington (Mo.) 50
Morningside 70, Westmar 52
Lawrence Tech, 97, Selfridge
Lloyd Adams, College freshman from Independence, Mo., and John Kassen, education freshman from Carrollton, Mo., were football players at KU last semester.
Minot Teachers 68, Bottineau Teachers 34
But this semester the freshman fullbacks went back home to join Coach Don Faurot's MU Tigers. Coach Faurot, whose theory is that Missouri high school athletes ought to attend their home university, announced the athletes' transfer with an "I-told-you-so" tinge yesterday.
Players Transfer
Teachers 34
Doubaco 60, Iowa Wesleyan 53
Ohio U. at Wesleyan 50
Oklahoma City u. 48, Tuskegee 46
Ripon 76, St. Norbert's 61
St. Thomas 65, St. Mary's (Minn.) 63
Xavier 83, Marvin u. 77
Dowagiae, Mich. — (U.P.)— John L. Coates advertised in the local paper for a $20 he'd lost—and got it back. The finder, Mrs. Dorothy Thurman, refused a reward.
The Ryukyus islands now have more fire-fighting equipment than at any other time in their history, due to the $147,000 GARIOA program.
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Toledo 57, Western Michigan 54
Augustana (S. D.) 56, South Dakota
49
state 49
Calvin 76, Alma 69
Texas 58, Baylor 46
East Texas Baptist 74, Texas Wes-
an 71
leyan 71
St. Edward's 59, Texas Lutheran 48
Kansas Wesleyan 67, McPherson 56
Tillotson college 59, Philip's 34
Another former Missouriian who came back to the fold was David Thomas, a basketball player who spent the fall semester at the University of Arizona.
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Women's Finals Began Tuesday In IM Sports
By JACKIE JONES
The final week of the Women's Intramural basketball program began last night, with ten teams seeing action.
Freshman BA defeated Chi Omega 29 to 17, Freshman AA defeated Cohops 30 to 15, Theta Phi Alpha forfeited to Freshman KMM, Kappa Kappa Gamma won over Alpha Phi 17 to 4 and Pi Beta Phi defeated Watkins hall 34 to 26.
In the Freshman BA-Chi Omega, Barbara Barnes made the difference between the two teams. She poured in 16 points as the freshman defeated their opponents by 12 points. They led 16 to 7 at the half, but Chi Omega matched them for the second period.
The Freshman AA team had little trouble in defeating another freshman squad, the Cohops. The AA's are the best of the freshman yanks, and should give some of the more experienced squads plenty of trouble in the finals. Mary Demeritt led the winners with 13 points.
Kappa Kappa Gamma has just too much power for the Alpha Phi team, and won easily by 13 points. The Kappa defense was tight all the way and allowed the opposition to score only two points in each half. Kathryn North and Martha Combs turned in the best game for the losers.
The best game of the night was the Pi Beta Phi victory over Watkins hall. The defense of both teams was considerably less effective than the offense, allowing the opponents to score freely. The score was close for the first half, but the Pi Phi's went ahead in the second and Watkins could not catch them.
Ann McLaughlan led the Pi Phi attack with 28 points, and Martha Thomson scored 13 for the losers.
The rest of the division titles, not decided by play last night, will be settled in the final games tonight.
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By JACKIE JONES Daily Kansan Sports Editor
Monday evening while sitting in the balcony of Hoch auditorium, I noticed several things which have been bothering students for quite some time, and like many others who are interested in the KU athletics I was bothered too.
Organized cheering (led by cheerleaders) was practically nonexistent. The few sparks of enthusiasm shown for the Kansas basketball team came only when the band was playing some march music.
On the only two occasions when I actually saw a yell being led by the cheerleaders, there were only six on the court. There may have been a reason, but there were more than six elected!
The KU basketball team does a great deal of work during those forty minutes that the clock is ticking in a game, and since they are doing it for us we should at least support them with all the enthusiasm possible.
In the game Monday, Colorado was too close for comfort in those last few minutes, but with better support from their fellow students the boys might have had more incentive for a last quarter drive, and a game which was almost lost might have been a great victory.
Coach "Phog" Allen has one of the finest teams in the nation, and it certainly deserves more support from the students than it is getting.
To get that support organized, so that the team may know it is appreciated, there must be someone to co-ordinate and to lead. I have always been under the impression that this is the reason we have cheerleaders. True, they cannot support a team by themselves, but it is to them that the students look for leadership.
Monday night and a lot of other nights, that leadership hasn't been there. We have one of the best teams in the country and one of the greatest players in cage history, so why not let them know it?
This lack of school spirit is not a figment of my imagination. Bill Mayer of the Lawrence Journal-World commented in his column recently that there was an amazing lack of enthusiasm among the students for the KU athletic teams.
We are all supposed to be in college for an education, but certainly this great search for knowledge should not compel us to become indifferent to sports and to the boys out there playing for us
Drake Relays Are Headaches
Des Moines, Ia. —(U,P)— Drake track Coach Tom Deckard, boss of the annual Drake Relays, has an easy-going manner that hides a multitude of worries.
Deckard has been director of the Relays, the midwest's oldest outdoor track carnival, since 1948. He has grown accustomed to the average headaches of the big show each season, but this year he again has the additional problems which come with the Olympic Games.
His meet provides a good test for Olympic hopefuls, warming up for the final trials later in the spring. The Olympics also place added interest on track, but add to Deckard's problems as relays boss.
Despite the chill temperatures Deckard has been working on the 1952 edition since Christmas. His busiest months are February and March.
Deckard said the Relay events will
be run on the yardage rather than metric basis because a change would cause too much confusion in determining starting posts and the finish line.
"We queried coaches in 1948 and again last fall about the hammer throw, but found no interest," he said.
Deckard's job as Relays boss is an added load to his duties as track coach, grooming Drake athletes for indoor and outdoor competition. His 1951 team was an example to show he doesn't shirk his coaching work. Drake's mile relay team captured
"The AAU and NCAA meets probably will be on a metric basis," he said. "But that's individual competition, not relays."
Two events will be added in view of Olympic competition, the hop-kip-and-jump to the field events and the 440-yard hurdles, comparable to the Olympics' 400-meter hurdles, to track events.
two important indoor victories, including the champion of champions mile relay at the Chicago relays.
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New York—(U.P.)-Peerless Kentucky and unbeaten Duguesse shoot for their 13th and 16th straight victories respectively tonight in the headline attractions of a feature program of college basketball.
Kentucky's Wildcats, rated the best team in the nation by the United Press board of coaches, play host to Mississippi in a Southeastern conference game.
Top Ball Teams Have Easy Tilts
Duquesne's Iron Dukes own the very best record in the nation, 15-0, and are ranked No. 8 by the coaches board. Tonight they're on the road at Niagara Falls playing a Niagara U. squad that has lost 12 out of 17 games.
When the Wildcats tangled with Ole Miss earlier this season, they set a new conference record by rolling up 116 points to Mississippi's 58, and chief interest tonight centers on how close the Kentucky sharpshooters come to that fantastic total again.
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
North Carolina State, ranked No. 16, nationally, absorbed a 70 to 61 beating by William and Mary in a Southern Conference game. It was the seventh loss in 21 games for the Wolfpack, especially surprising in view of their easy 82-46 decision over William and Mary in their first meeting this year.
The chief danger to the Iron Dukes could be that they will be "looking past" Niagara to their heralded clash at Pittsburgh on Friday night with St. Bonaventure, the only other unbeaten major team in the nation. If the Dukes can get past these two games, the remaining hurdles to a perfect season will be Cincinnati, Villanova, Akron, Geneva, and Baldwin-Wallace.
University Daily Konson Page 5
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Oklahoma City, rated No. 18, just managed to beat Tulsa, 48 to 46, for its 13th win in 16 games.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. February 6. 1952
Robert Mitchum Thinks Acting Is A Ridiculous Profession
Hollywood — (U.P.)— Robert Mitchum yawned today that most movie stars take picture business too seriously. He thinks it's a "ridiculous and humiliating process."
The sleepy-eyed Lothario is the only thespian of the plaster city to admit he makes for the silver screen because he just doesn't have anything better to do.
And the silliest side of the cinema, he figured, is that most of the movie stars play it straight.
"They're so serious." he said.
Why doesn't everybody have fun
vorking? What else is there? You
don't get to keep the money you
make."
On Mitchum's movie sets, more drama goes on behind the camera than in front. Currently between scenes of "Cowpoke" he sings loudly and fires a deadly water pistol at 60 paces around the set, setting off a wild series of hours by eating garlic before his love scenes with Susan Hawward.
"Tomorrow I'm bringing in some cap pistols," he said. "We gotta shoot things up a bit. It's getting a little too dignified around here."
Another "ridiculous" custom in Hollywood, he went on, is that they make movies in which he has to
ride horses. Mitchum, a veterinar of Hopalong Cassidy epics before he hit the A-time, thinks that riding "a silly form of transport."
"Why not take a bus or ride a pogo stick? Jumping on a beast's back is an archaic expression. I come from Connecticut where a horse is something you eat.
"Another funny thing about this business is the social life. I don't know many actors socially. They don't seek me out, either. They've all got Cadillacs and buy their suits at Eddie Schmidt's and they've got time to play, I guess. I don't."
"In fact, I don't know anybody socially. I have a sign on the gate—no peddlers, actors, or agents allowed. I don't go to parties because I don't like the effort of leaving or getting there.
"I think it, would be a lot more fun to run a country store than be a film star. I wouldn't give a darn if I lost my acting job tomorrow."
"This movie business is such nonsense. I always have the feeling that if I close my eyes it will all go away."
At this point Miss Hayward walked by on her way to the set and Mitchum hollered. "There goes the oll-d, gray mare!"
Miss Hayward just smiled.
Official Bulletin
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cherchieren
Sasnak meeting, 7:30 Thursday,
Vomen's Gym.
Students enrolled in Western Civilization who have not yet arranged or an appointment this semester must do so by Monday, Feb. 11.
Psychology club. 7:30 p.m., Thursday, 9 Strong hall. Speakers from alcoholics Anonymous. Everyone
Alpha Kappa Psi business meeting. 7:15 tonight, Strong Annex F-3. University Radio Players meeting. 4:30 today, KFKU studios.
QS1- amateur radio club meet
30 tonight, E. E. lab. All welcome
Pre-Nursing club, 4 today, Home economics dining room, Fraser hall. Square Dance club, 7:30 tonight. Convention room, Union. All invited
Quill club, 7 tonight, Pine room union.
Jay Janes, 5 today, Myers hall. Chess club, 7:15 tonight, 111 Strong.
KuKu club, 7:15 p.m. Thursday,
105 Green, election.
A. S. T. E., 7:30 tonight, Fowler hops.
International club meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Pine room, Union. Dr. Sandellus, speaker, "Constitutional Government and World Crises." Foreign and American graduate students invited.
Student Union Board meeting,
$^{10}$ today. East room, Union
Campus Affairs committee, 7:15
GEE! RUST CRAFT
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Jewelry Roberts Gifts
833 Mass.
Amyx-Wilson Wedding Announced
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Amyx, Lawrence, announce the recent marriage of their daughter, Helen Marie, to Alex H. Wilson, son of Mrs. Elizabeth P. Wilson, Camiah, Idaho.
Mrs. Wilson was graduated from the University in 1951 with an A.B. degree. She was a member of Kappa Phi sorority. She is now circulation librarian in charge of the Green room at Watson library.
Mr. Wilson is a second year law student and a member of Phi Alpha Delta law fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson are living at 836 Mississippi street.
Intramural Bridge tournament,
7.15 p.m., Feb. 12, 13, 14. Recreation
Register. SUA office and enter as a
noon, entry fee 50 cents per team.
tonight, 222 Strong, Subject, School Spirit.
Women's Rifle club, 5 p.m. Thursday, Pine room, Union. All members attend and bring dues.
Student Union Library Committee 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Hawk's Nest
The society page of the Daily Kansans welcomes individual engagement or wedding pictures, and photographs of campus social events.
Society Asks For Picture Contributions
The latter will especially be considered, as we feel that students would enjoy seeing what happens at the parties which before have only been announced in the Kansan.
Glossy prints are preferable and any photo should be at least 5x7 inches in size.
The pictures may either be mailed to Society, in care of the University Daily Kansan, or brought in to the newsroom of the new William Allen White School of Journalism. There is no charge involved.
-Dianne Stonebraker
Society Editor.
Jan Willson To Wed Denver U. Man
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Willson, Erie, announce the engagement of their daughter, Jan Kathryn, to Charles M. Gillen, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Gillen, Colorado Springs, Colo.
Miss Willson is a fine arts sopohmore and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Mr. Gillen attends Denver university where he is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. The wedding will be in June.
Law Wives To Hear Moreau
Dean F. J. Moreau of the School of Law will speak to the wives of Law students at a meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Law lounge in the basement of Green. "The Wife of the Lawyer" is the title of Dean Moreau's talk.
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Dixie's Carmel Corn Shop
Westminster Council To Meet
842 Mass
The KU Westminster council will meet at 5 p.m. Thursday at Westminster house, announced Marvin Reed, moderator of the KUWF.
1330
DU-ADPi Dessert Dance
Open Evenings
Delta Upsilon fraternity entertained Alpha Delta Pi sorority with a dessert dance used in graduation events. Mrs. Thomas A. Clark and Mrs. James A. Hooke.
Phi Psi Elects Shellhass
Howard Shellhass, business senior, was recently elected president of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity for the spring semester.
Other officers elected were Clay Roberts, vice-president; Carroll Speckman, treasurer; Charles Orthwein, corresponding secretary, and Pete Hershey, recording secretary.
Dr. Chakravarty To Speak
Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities and former advisor to the India UN delegation, will speak to the Wesley foundation at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the First Methodist church. Dr. Chakravarty's topic will be "The Way of Gandhi."
Contrary to popular opinion, lightning sometimes strikes as often as 40 times in the same place. Westinghouse engineers report. To the human eye these strokes appear as one, because flashes may be only a thousandth of a second apart.
Designers Protect Secret Of Fashion In Recent Show
Hollywood—(U.P.)-Gilbert Adrian, designer, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios went to almost fantastic lengths to protect the secret of their fashion show which figures as a major part of the film, "Lovely to Look At."
The 40 creations on parade during this sequence—on the backs of the likes of Kathryn Grayson, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Ann Miller and Marge Champion — represent five months' work in Adrian's Beverly Hills studio.
They also represent the best of the fabric weaver's art and include 800 hours' work by 25 top seam-stresses, 300 hours on the part of seven expert hand beaders, 152 hours on the part of 15 hand-embroidery specialists.
Some of the country's top mills devoted two months to setting up looms for weaving special fabrics, such as tiger-striped silks for bathing suits and metal cloth for an evening gown.
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University Daily Kansan
Page
Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will promptly. Ads must be called in during the business hours (except cept Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business office. Journals must be submitted 3:45 p.m. the day before publication dates.
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Mondays and Fridays. Kansas City Plaza district or city hall, leave Lawrence 4:50 p.m. from Military building; also part-time passengers for weekends. See Kuster, west door Millennium building at 4:50 Monday through Friday. 4-6-8
TRANSPORTATION or share side ride from
CLASSes - Classes from 0, S,
MWF. Phone FE 9118.
S
RIDERS WANTED: Leave K.C. 7:30 a.m.
Leave KU 5:50 p.m. Highway 10. Call
Bob Breedlove, Indep. 8552 after 8:00
p.m.
2-7
RIDERS: From Kansas City, Mo. 63rd and Brookside, to University, Monday. Wednesday, Friday, 6:30 a.m. Rheva Spitacushy, Jackson 1936. 2-6
ARLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for business or recreational dates. Mrs. Lois Odafter, Downs Services, 1015 Mass.
BUSINESS SERVICE
Ask us about family rates, ski coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
in-person ski trips in summer.
Call Miss Glesseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
REOPENED for Business: Oread Barber Shop, 1237 Eadre. Hours: 8:00 to 5:30 daily. Good barber service also agent. Good Lace Barber Service. Charley Coffman and Bernard Bovor. 11
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop. 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island.
TYING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. Bocoroe, 88 La Apl. 4, upstairs. 275JL.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing Mrs. Shields, 1295 Ohio. Pk161.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tt**
STUDYING today tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tf
XYPING: Experience in theses, term
apers, miscellaneous typing, and sten-
il cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone
952W, 1915 Tennessee. tt
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment and equipment, assisting fast efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. ff
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made ples and parking space for customers. Air-conditioned kitchen. aft. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tff
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop for you. In addition, one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tf
FOR SALE
RENTAL TYPEWITERS! Both new
rentals cost $150 for $1.00 per week or $3.50 per month.
The easy way to better, neater papers,
is to buy one at the Student
Union Book Store.
INDEX your vocabulary and language books with the new Superior Cloth tabs. A set from A to Z for just 10c. Student Union Book Store. 8
Make this your HEADQUARTERS for College Outline Series, Schaum's Outlines, and other study aids. Student Union Book Store. 8
STILL NO INCREASE in price on 140
25c at your Student Union Book Store. 8
SMITH-CORONA silent portable typewriter with case; used very little Original cost $84.50. Sale price $54.50 Dr. See Beg. Dr. 16 Strong.
RCA VICTOR radio-phonograph console
Hewlett-Packard phone 844-1000. Hewlett-
Shellsan, phone 844-1000. Ind.
SPECIAL RATES for students on Time.
Life, Fortune, and Newsweek Magazines.
Mail subscription to all magazines.
P.S. Learn a rebate tool! Student Book Store.
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands preform better than to music with a dock radio. See these values at Goodrich, 929 Mass. 2-13
Comfort! Couturianes
JAX HAWKER
NEW Path-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
TODAY - THURS.
Shows 2:30-7-9
"Delightful...Wonderfully Rich" -N. Y.
Times
W. SOMERSET
MAUGHAM'S
Trio
Adm. 14c - 60c
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
TONITE and THURS.
Open 6:45 p.m.
Dennis Morgan
Virginia Mayo
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PLYMOUTH '99 Special Deluxe, excel-
celled telephone for below a
dealer price. Phone 2614W4.
1949 CHEVROLET convertible. Deluxe radio and heater; clean; low mileage good rubber. Priced to sell. Call 715 or 4238.
ROOM FOR BOYS; nicely furnished,
single rooms; convenient to KU and
students; double to share with
junior in School of Business—twin beds
1303 Vermont.
FOR RENT
AT 707 WEST 12th. Double room, with twin beds for girls. Also will serve home-cooked meals to boys or girls. Call 964. 2.7
LARGE COMFORTABLE rooms for boys at reasonable rates; excellent location on bus line. Phone 1671R. 2-6
TRAILERS FOR RENT. two wheel and our wheels. Have some good used trailers; also a 1938 Ford two-door, good one. Hatchet TRAiler rental, Vorth 3rd. 2-11
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
1122 Miss L. each a month
1222 Miss L. phone 495
ROOMS, double and single. See at 1312 Ohio. 8
APARTMENT for rent Three rooms.
Room $60 a month; utilities paid:
1339 Abbey
BOARDERS WANTED! Good food, home cooked! Great companionship at the Nu Sigma Nu house. Very informal. Call 366 today for information. 8
ROOMS for boys, single or double. $15
a month. 1339 Ohio. 6
LOST
PAIR OF horn-rimmed glasses Sunday afternoon. Call Alie Deem, phone 358-7
BLACK, GOLD TOP, Parker 51 pen. Has sentimental value. Name inscribed, Charles H. Dick. Call 3445. Liberal reward. 6
MISCELLANEOUS
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
ers buyers. Williams. W. J. Almen.
Almen, 3110R.
FREE TUTORING in English; review in
English; rhetoric; theme
writing. Phone 33788W.
Wednesday, February 6, 1951
College Grads Are Getting Many Job Offers,UP Reports
The current crop of college graduates can just about write their own ticket in the 1952 job market, a survey showed today.
It was definitely a "graduates market" for the mid-winter term of students leaving school, particularly for engineer and scientific graduates. Some have as many as 20 job offers. Ten was considered common.
Salaries were correspondingly enticing. The average was around $325 a month with many up to $400.
By UNITED PRESS
Job placement officials agreed the call for college-trained people was the greatest of all time, brought on by the defense effort and the draft.
The demand for graduates in the arts was not quite so heavy as for the technical fields, but it was very brisk.
Employer representatives crowded onto campuses, interviewing likely graduates and "fighting" for top men. As many as six such representatives called at university placement offices daily, offering their lures.
The demand for engineers was brought on by the defense effort and the premium on technical knowledge.
Ranking right behind the engineers and physicists as the most sought-after graduates came the accountants, then business administration students and government majors.
MAN'S light-weight top coat. Found in
strong hall. Owner may identify and
ay for this ad. Call the Kansan, KU 776,
2.6
In many cases, selective service officials were waiting for the graduate to receive his diploma before handing his induction notice. This left the remainder of the class in a
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bargaining position.
Harvard said qualified graduate in most fields "can practically writ their own ticket."
But in some instances, firms wre hiring graduates regardless of the draft status with a view toward re employing them when they left service. This was particularly true o large companies.
Harvard also noticed an increasing interest in government work among its graduates. Starting salaries in the government field go as high as $8,500 a year. And students feel they are "doing something more significant."
Fire Chief Confident
Center Ossippee, N.H. — (U.P.) — When the fire bells rang, everyone attending Sunday service at the Congregational church held his breath. The Rev. Clifford W. Law continued with his sermon after saying he had every confidence in the fire fighters. The pastor double as Center Ossippee's fire chief.
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FLAME of ARABY"
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 6, 1952
Grads Easily Get Jobs
Jewelry, Silversmithing Degree Offered
By MARION KLIEWER
The University has the distinction of being the first school in the United States offering a degree in a four-year course in jewelry and silversmithing.
This is the third year the course is being offered. Graduates have had no trouble getting jobs, and in many have been well pleased with their work.
"Right now things are a little tight in the industry because of a shortage of materials, but if I had any number of graduates today, I could place them by tomorrow," was the comment of Prof. Carlyle H. Smith, organizer and instructor of the course.
Professor Smith said the jewelry and silversmithing industry is one of the top 10 in the country in the number of persons it employs.
"Yet, it is one of the few professional fields which is not overcrowded, and which at the same time has satisfactory monetary rewards," he explained.
When one of the first graduates was hired by a Kansas City industry, the factory superintendent expressed a great deal of skepticism, thinking that his new employee would not understand silversmithing techniques nor be able to use silversmithing tools the first time he started on the job.
In a short while the superintendent found that his new employee "knew his stuff." Now that company is one of the strongest supporters of the course.
The K. U. course is closely allied with the industry. It has an arrangement something like internship for doctors and practice teaching for teachers. Before graduation each sitemithersiming student must spend between three and four months working for a manufacturing jeweler, getting actual bench work experience. The department finds the jobs for the students and they are paid at learners' rates.
Students have made good showing in decorative arts and ceramics fairs. Last spring in the National Decorative and Ceramics show at Wichita, 2,000 entries were made and only 400 accepted. Five of the 400 were the work of K. U. students.
One of the requirements for graduation is that each senior set up an exhibit of his work which is graded by members of the department of design staff. These exhibits are set up in the conference wing of Strong hall where the department laboratories and classrooms are situated.
The course covers the designing and making of silver jewelry, including simple soldering processes and wire work; advanced soldering processes, store setting, and elements
C. K. PARKS
LEARNS SILVERSMITHING — Cecil Reed, fine arts senior, is one of the KU students studying silversmithing. He already has been offered three jobs following graduation. He is shown smoothing the surface of a bowl after it has been raised from a flat piece of
of electrophating; beginning silver-smithing, including the "raising" of simple forms as bowls and trays; and elementary engraving. Particular attention is given to soldering which is the trickiest single operation in repair and special order work.
Special emphasis is placed on special order and repair work. To train themselves for this, students are asked as a class project to examine shop windows and select what appears to them to be the worst-looking piece of costume jewelry on display.
Then they are to sketch the piece as it is and later re-design it, from both an artistic standpoint and the standpoint of creating a saleable piece of jewelry.
A total of 124 hours is required for graduation for the bachelor of fine arts degree. The three months of on-the-job training is not included in these hours. It carries no credit.
Included in the 124 hours are 70 hours of art,12 hours of art history, and 12 hours of economics or business.
The course instructor, Professor Smith, came to K. U. from Rhode Island where for five years he worked at the bench with Richard Paul, considered to be one of the
University To Begin Painting New Studio At KFKU
The department of buildings studio B this week. R. Edwin KFKU. said today.
Pre-Meds Should Plan For Test
Pre-Medical students desiring to enter medical schools in the fall of 1953 should start making arrangements to take the Medical College Admission test, the School of Medicine announced today.
Studio B is one of the two new studios being built at the engineering experiment station as a part of the University's expansion program in radio broadcasting.
The tests, sponsored by the Association of American Medical colleges, will be given Saturday, May 10, and Monday, Nov. 3. The tests are prepared and administered by the educational Testing service.
The room is 12 by 20 feet. It contains 14 splays made of plywood. These splays form a series of cylindrical diffusors which spread sound waves.
"Few universities in this country have a better acoustically treated studio." Mr. Browne said.
Examination centers in Kansas are the Fort Hays State college, Hays; the University of Kansas; Kansas State college, Manhattan; Kansas State Teachers college, Pittsburg; and the University of Wichita. Wichita.
Mr. Browne said the walls will be painted mauve pink and the ceiling dark green.
The examination consists of tests in general scholastic ability, understanding of modern society, and achievement in basic science. It will take about six hours, that is, two sessions of about three hours each.
A bull-session will be held for all students at 7:30 p.m., Friday in the Union music room.
Mr. Browne said studio B would be the most-used studio when the University station goes on the air with FM. It will be used for interviews, roundtable discussions, plays, and other broadcasting activities.
and grounds plans to start painting Browne, director of radio station
Further information will be available at the Guidance bureau within a week or so.
Since no organized program has been planned, students will have an opportunity to discuss any topic freely and a chance to meet out-of-state and foreign students.
Candidates for the University players must turn in their points by 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Leola Stewart education senior and president of the players, said today.
Players Candidates Must Turn In Points
The officers and advisory board of the University players will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in Green hall. The officers and discussed for initiation purposes.
On the anniversary broadcast, Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology, said that the residents of rural communities can no longer live in isolation and let the rest of the world go by.
Professor Clark went on to say that rural areas of the United States are basic in furnishing food, raw material, and a large share of citizens to the nation. There can be no peasant citizenry in this vital part of the population.
Candidates must have 12 points to be acceptable. Points are given for participation in plays and for work on stage properties.
Sociology Program Marks Anniversary
English Exam Set In Fine Arts School
The School of Fine Arts has adopted a regulation requiring all Fine arts majors to pass the Eng- glish examination as a degree requirement.
foremost creators of special order jewelry in New England. His work has been exhibited at the Rhode Island School of Design, the Wichita Art association, Gorham's "Fifth Avenue" show, and the Los Angeles County fair.
The requirement goes into effect with the graduating class of June 1953.
Bell Telephone Rate Hike Scheduled For February 23
Topeka—(U.P.)—New Southwestern Bell telephone rate schedules, which will increase private users' monthly bills by from 50-cents to $1.50 and business rates from $1.25 to $3.25, were approved today by the Kansas corporation commission. They will become effective Feb. 23.
A few increases in long distance station-to-station calls within the state were also approved.
-News Roundup
The higher rates for Southwestern Bell customers are based on a complicated schedule which generally provides greater increases for telephone users in thickly populated areas of the staff.
Four party residence service will cost from 50 to 75-cents a month more under the new rate system. Two party residence service increases range from 75-cents to $1; and single party service increases range from $1.25 to $1.50 a month.
Approval Certain
The Senate foreign relations committee unanimously approved the peace treaty Tuesday, along with mutual security pacts between the United States and Japan, the Philippines and Australia and New Zealand.
Washington—(U.P.)The Japanese peace treaty appeared headed today for certain Senate approval, but not without a fight.
The Senate today took up, for the second time, an agreement to safeguard the other flank of Asia by admitting Greece and Turkey to the North Atlantic pact.
McCush will be in charge of political organization for the Eisenhower campaign and will coordinate his efforts with those in Washington.
Sen. Frank Carlson, (R-Kan.) a co-director of the national Eisenhower headquarters said McCuisn will accept his new duties Feb. 10.
Director Named
Southerns Blocked
Washington—(U.P.)—John McCuish, Newton, Kan., publisher and a prominent Republican leader, was named director of the Eisenhower-for-President headquarters in Topeka today.
The bills' supporters admitted defeat in their attempt to get the Senate to consider the Hawaiian measure first because it was believed to have a better chance of passage. The Senate Democratic policy committee declined late Tuesday to put the Hawaiian bill ahead of the Alaskan one now under debate.
Washington—(U.P.)-Senate backers of bills giving statehood to Alaska and Hawaii moved today to thwart a reported attempt by southern Democrats to send the Alaska measure back to committee.
Tanks Ram 6 Miles
More than 20 medium tanks lumbered across the frozen paddies in sub-zero weather at dawn in a surprise armored raid into Red territory north of Chorwon. Not one Allied tank was lost.
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea—(U.P.)A powerful United Nations tank-infantry force rammed six miles into Communist territory today on the western front and blasted enemy supply lines and installations with direct fire for three hours.
Admiral Chosen
Vice. Adm. Jerailud Wright, present American deputy on the group, will become deputy commander of J.S. naval forces in European waters and commander of U.S. ships in the eastern Atlantic, with headquarters in London.
Washington — (U.P.) — Vice Adm.
Arthur C. Davis, until recently director of the joint staff of the joint chiefs of staffs soon will become deputy U.S. representative on the North Atlantic treaty organization's standing group, a top-level strategic body.
Attempt UMT Ban
Washington—(U.P.) A move developed in the House today to prohibit the start of universal military training until the draft is halted.
Rep. James E. Van Zandt (R-Pa) disclosed the drive as the House armed services committee prepared to put its formal okay on a UMT measure that would call all fit males at age 18 for six months of basic military training.
ANNUAL WINTER SUIT SALE
Your Size, Your Model Your Fabric
Is Here Sizes 35 thru 44L. Flannels, Tweeds Gabardines, Sharkskins
At Savings Up To $17.37
TOPCOATS ... off 25%
TUXEDOS ... off 25%
SWEATERS ... off 25%
the
university shop
Across From Lindley
Phone 715
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Daily Kansan
49th Year
Thursday, February 7, 1952
AWS Workshop In Strong Today
Every woman student interested in running for an office or a seat in the 1952-53 Associated Women Students senate must attend the leadership workshop 7.15 p.m. today in Strong auditorium.
Petitions for AWS offices will be distributed after the main program. Positions open are president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer and two All Student Council representatives.
Candidates must meet the eligibility rules governing student organizations, and, in addition, the president and vice-president must be a junior or a senior during the '52-'53 school year. The president must have previously served at least one semester in the AWS senate, and the vice-president at least one semester in the AWS house of representatives.
No.84
The secretary must be at least a sophomore in '52-'53. One ASC representative is to be affiliated with a social sorority and the other an independent.
Petitions for office will be returned by the end of the second session of the workshop Tuesday, Feb. 12. All petitioners will then take an examination over all phases of AWS and material covered in the workshop Tuesday, Feb. 19.
Elections will be Wednesday, Feb. 27. The new officers with the defeated candidates will comprise the AWS senate for the coming year.
Miss Carmie Wolf, Topeka, will discuss "Leadership in the Community" at 7:15 p.m. today at the first news event sponsored by the Associated Women Students. The meeting will be held in Strong auditorium.
KU To Hold Debate Meet
The words will fly fast and often Friday and Saturday at the University as 76 debaters on 19 teams talk it out for the Kansas state high school debate championships in Classes AA, A and B.
The seven Class B schools will lead off with three rounds of debate starting at 1:30 p.m. Friday. The Class AA and A schools will do their five rounds on Saturday. The re-mentation will be nounced at 4 p.m. Saturday at an informal reception in the Hawk's Nest of the Union.
Hutchinson will be out to defend the Class AA state titles won here in 1950 and 1951. Stafford of both 1950 and 1951 in Class A.
The Class B schools, holding their finals here for the first time in several years, will be Winchester, Madison, Ford, Lehigh, Haven, West Mineral and Roosevelt High of Emporia.
Besides Hutchinson the AA schools will be Arkansas City, Winfield, Russell, Topeka and Shawne Mission. Filling the Class A brackets, Steafford will be Odley, Osborne, Abilene, Council Grove and Eureka.
This year's debate question is the desirability of conscripting all citizens for essential services in time of war.
The speech department will be host to the debaters Friday night at an informal reception in the Pine room of the Union. University Extension is conducting the tournament for the Kansas State High School Activities association.
Dorothy L. O'Connor
MRS. JANET TURK
Siepi Enjoys U.S. Audiences
By MARILYN DUBACH
Cesare Siepi, distinguished Metropolitan bass, was well received by a small but appreciative audience last night in Hoch auditorium. Artistic prefection, warmth and vigor characterized his performance.
The Italian opera star said he is thrilled by American audiences. He was extremely gracious and willing to give several encores.
Mr. Siepi said he thinks American audiences are much warmer than those in Italy. He accounted this to the fact that Italy has been accustomed to music for centuries more than America. The friendliness of the American hand-shake particularly impresses him, he said.
He is making his first concert tour with his accompanist, Leo Taubman, Italian pianist. He enjoys traveling, but is anxious to return home for a rest and to visit his mother in Milano, his birthplace.
After returning from a summer of rest and study in Italy, Mr. Siepi will again sing for the Metropolitan's winter season.
Other cities on his recital tour include Chicago, Philadelphia, Dallas and Minneapolis.
Mr. Siepi's program last night was the third attraction of the season presented by the University Concert course.
Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen,
University of Kansas basketball
coach, will speak at the monthly
Presidents' breakfast at 9:30 a.m.
Saturday in the west alcove of the
Union cafeteria.
Campus Leaders To Hear 'Phog'
Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, Rev. Dale Turner, professor of religion, John Ise, professor of economics, Chancellor Franklin D. Clinton and other faculty members have been previous speakers at the breakfasts.
The breakfasts are given in order that presidents of various campus organizations may gather informally.
The breakfasts, which are free are sponsored by Student Union Activities. Ann Ivester, college junior, is in charge of the arrangements.
Karl E. Madden, chairman of the Iowa Development commission, addressed sales and market management with business students Wednesday.
iowa Development Expert Speaks To Business Groups
Mr. Madden is vice-president and sales manager of the Republic Electric company, Davenport, Iowa.
Mrs. Janet Turk, pianist, will be presented by the School of Fine Arts as the ninth in the series of faculty recitals at 4 p.m. Sunday.
Faculty Recital Set For Sunday
Mrs. Turk, a former University student, has been instructor in piano at KU since 1946.
She holds the master of music and the bachelor of music education degrees and is a memoirist. Katie and aman at Phi Epsilon, professional music sororities.
Her advanced piano work was done with Rudolph Ganz, president of the Chicago Musical college, Chicago; Ernest Uhtcheson, former president of the Juilliard School of Music, New York City, and Austin Conradi, head of the Peabody conservatory. Baltimore.
Before returning to the KU faculty, Mrs. Turk was active in recital work and in teaching at several colleges in Virginia, Texas and Missouri.
Study with Mr. Ganz was made possible for Mrs. Turk by a faculty scholarship from Lindenwood college where she taught piano.
Machine Shop Practice, Series One, is a new course offered through the co-operation of University Extension and Engineering Shop Practice.
Course Offered In Shop Practice
The course will include shop work
overing basic tools, offhand tool
printer, drill press, engine lathe
and shaper.
The course is designed for the beginner in machine tool work, and we meet Tuesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. for 10 weeks, in Fowler shops.
An enrollment fee will cover use of supplies and instruction.
Interested persons should contact E. A. McFarland, University Extension or Paul G. Hausman, Engineering Shop Practice.
The class has met once, but enollment is still open.
Interviews Today In Marvin
Merchants Biscuit company will interview mechanical engineering students to be graduated in June, today. Interested persons should sign the interview schedule in Dean T DeWitt Carr's office. 111 Marvin hall.
Political Authority To Visit Campus
Mr. George will address both students and faculty members on such topics as social science, geography, journalism and political science.
John B. George, nationally known authority on politics and international relations, will be at the University during the coming week.
He is a graduate of Princeton and has attended Oxford university, and has served in the armed forces in China, Burma, India, Japan, and Pacific islands. He was American aide-de-camp and personal liaison officer to the Allied land force commander in Southeast Asia.
This and similar positions have given him a wide knowledge of political affairs of that area.
Mr. George will be available for discussions with students. Appointments should be made directly with or through the chancellor's office.
Mr. George's schedule will be: Monday.
11 a.m., Marriage and Family Relations, 210 Blake. Topic: Family relationship problems in Africa.
Noon, luncheon with committee at Faculty club.
2 p.m., Marriage and Family Relations, 110 Fraser.
6 p.m., Guest of discussion group.
Tuesday
10 a.m., Economic Geography, 420 Lindley. Topic: General problems of economic and cultural developments.
Noon, luncheon with human relations faculty at Faculty club. There will be an informal discussion of and personal relations of various persons.
2 p.m., American Politics, 200 Strong.
Wednesday
9 a.m..The Editorial.205 Journalism building.Topic:Backgrounding the news.
11 a.m., Race Relations, 17 Strong annex E. Topic: Observations on race relations.
Noon, luncheon with sociology faculty at Faculty club.
7 p.m., meeting with history club Topic: Differences between Germar and British administrations.
Thursday
10 a.m., Contemporary Civilization,
16 Strong annex E. Topic:
Comparison of African problems
with race problems of other areas.
Noon, luncheon with journalism faculty at Faculty club.
2 p.m. Editorial Problems and Punishment.
Topic: Problems of communications.
3 p.m. Reporting II, 206 Journalism
impaired by impact of
Africa on international news.
Friday
10 a.m., Principles of Public Administration, 12 Strong annex E. Topic: Management techniques, local administrative organization and procedures, and person-to-person aspects of government in the area.
Noon, luncheon with political science faculty at PAU. Call (818) 240-3900. Active Government;
1 p.m., Comparative Government;
JOHN B. GEORGE
Practice of Public Administration, 114 Strong. Topic: General constitutional system for government of East African areas.
3 p.m., Political Dynamics, 19 Strong annex E. Topic: Dynamics of political problems relating to East Africa.
Debate Teams Meet Tonight
Debate teams from the University and Emporia State Teachers college will meet in two debates tonight.
Heywood Davis and Stephen Rench, college seniors, will represent KU on the topic, "Permanent Wage and Price Controls." This debate will be held in Green hall at 8 p.m. The public is invited.
Win Koerper, college senior, and Kenneth Dam, college sophomore, will represent the KU speakers bureau in the other debate against Emporia at 6:30 p.m. in the Eldridge hotel. This debate will be before the Sertoma club.
Both KU and Emporia took part in the National Invitational debate tournament at West Point, N.Y. Thirty-four schools in the country participated. Emporia won second place and KU tied for fifth.
Directory For New Students
New students may obtain their copies of the student directory at the registrar's office by presenting their activity cards. Robert Walker, business manager, said the supply is limited and it will be first come, first served.
Miss Henry To Speak At Conference
Miss Edith Henry, supervisor of art in the Denver elementary schools, will be the guest lecturer at the third art education conference, Friday and Saturday in the third floor auditorium of Strong hall.
In addition to teaching positions in the Denver schools, Miss Henry has served as instructor in art education during summer sessions and workshops at Northwestern, Chicago and Denver universities.
She received her bachelor of fine arts degree from the University of Nebraska in 1926, and her master's degree from the University of Denver in 1943.
She has done graduate work at Columbia university, the Chicago Art institute and the University of Chicago.
The conference will be advised by Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, and conducted by art education majors.
10 a.m. - "Art Materials and the Learning Situation," a lecture by Miss Henry.
Friday's program:
11 a.m. - a discussion led by Nancy MacGregor, education junior, president of the art education club.
1:30 p.m. - a group study of the special children's art exhibit on the second floor of Strong hall, prepared
by the National Art Education association.
MISS EDITH HENRY
PRESIDENT
3 p.m. - a discussion led by Mary Ann Deschner, education junior.
4 p.m. - a tea for Miss Henry in
332 hall.
6 p.m. - a dinner at the Eldridge hotel, where Miss Henry's speech will be "Art in the Lives of Children."
Saturday's program:
9:30 a.m. - "The Role of the Art Supervisor," a lecture by Miss Bingham
10:30 a.m. - a discussion led by Dorothy Phelps, education senior.
This annual conference brings students of art education in contact with persons who are accomplishing important things in art education in the United States, Miss Ellsworth said.
Art supervisors and other educators in the state are invited to attend.
Martha Shaw, education junior, will introduce the speaker, and Marlene Peterson, education junior, is handling arrangements for the tea.
Other committee chairmen are Rosalie Thorne and Georgen Ankrom, education juniors, (exhibits), and Pat Harris and Mary Anne Forman, education seniors, (hospitality).
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 7, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
Practical Experience Has Educational Value
Any person connected with the field of education should give consideration to the report made recently by Dean Ernest O. Meiby of New York university. In it the call was put out for "less bookishness, more learning by doing."
Dean Melby, as head of the School of Education, directed his remarks specifically at the training given to those going into the teaching profession. However, the ideas he presents readily can be applied to almost all of the other fields.
Students must be prepared, he says, to take an active part in community life—to solve educational and social problems on a first-hand basis—if they are to fulfill their future roles as educational leaders.
"Student teaching, of course, is a relatively old device that seeks to give the prospective teacher an opportunity to learn by doing. Rarely, however, has it been conducted under conditions of sufficiently full participation, competent supervision, and continuity over a sufficient period of time to make it an effective element in the prospective teacher's program," he adds.
The proper type of training to bring about this result must be that which brings the students to grips with the problems at the practical level. Dean Melby maintains that even the advanced students at the doctoral level cannot do their work in libraries alone. "Field work is essential."
Many steps such as Dean Melby is advocating already in practice here. The School of Education sends its students out for eight straight weeks of practice teaching under actual conditions instead of the old method of one or two hours a day for a semester.
All law students are required to take a course in courtroom practice. In it they gather the material necessary to try a case, prepare their arguments and briefs and have actual court sessions complete with judge and jury.
The dean strongly favors workshops as a means of teacher training. Through them it is possible to integrate subject matter and experience into a realistic program.
All technical courses in the School of Journalism are run in connection with the Daily Kansan. In many there are specific amounts of time which must be spent on the job.
Undoubtedly examples of other schools of the University doing the same thing can be found. Some types of learning can make use of the practical education more readily than others.
But any person interested in making education more effective in its goals should check his work to see if it can't be improved by having "less bookishness, more learning by doing."
Joe Taylor.
Boy Scouts Celebrating Their 42nd Anniversary
This week the Boy Scouts of America are celebrating their 42nd anniversary.
Cub scouts, eagle scouts, and scout masters are helping each other to make themselves good citizens for a better community, country, and world.
The Boy Scout Week slogan is "Forward . . . on Liberty's Team." In their meetings, recreation hours, and through service to the public Boy Scouts strive to keep the bell of liberty ringing and the torch of freedom burning. By being loyal, helpful, kind, obedient, brave, clean, and reverent they accomplish this task.
Boy Scouts throughout the world work for each other regardless of race, creed, color, or nationality. This service, interest, and helpfulness is a lesson that diplomats would do well to imitate. Meaningless phrases would then be replaced by genuine actions in the interest of peace. —Joe Lastelic.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room
KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU.376
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Associate Editor for The Daily Press, and Executive Director by the
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EDITORIAL STAFF
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Editorial Assistants Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zohm
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman,
Joe Lasellec, Jim Pawers
City Editor ... Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newman
Telegraph Editor ... Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Max Thompson
society Editor ... Dianne Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Pauline Patterson
sports Editor ... Judie Jones
News Advisor ... Victor J. Danilov
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager ... Emory Williams
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*Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except afternoons and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second last month Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
_etters:
Please publish the following in the interests of general information and edification.
Dear Editor:
Junior Disagrees With Sophomores
To Whom It May Concern:
Though perhaps unduly optimistic in assuming that someone will be concerned, we do hope that others shared our appreciation and enjoyment of the recent attempt of "a representative group" of sophomores to revive that fine old American tradition of school spirit. We might add, parenthetically, that it would require a "representative group" of sophomores to attempt such an undertaking.
We also notice that the crew hats will "distinguish" the sophomores; we suppose this refers to a matter of mutual identification, since to non-sophomores, sophomores are easily distinguishable at first glance.
Another dubious point about the sophomores; the article states "they reason." Obviously, everyone will have discarded this fatuous statement into the realm of the impossible and ridiculous, but the result at which the sophomores, willy-nilly, arrive is that class spirit, obviously a boon beyond compare, fosters an even more magnificent attainment, school spirit. Although we would be the last to admit that school spirit does not add a certain flavor to college life, we do not feel that it is something to be consciously strived for, but rather an unavoidable, intangible, and easily detected quality of the student body, somewhat akin to "B. O."
However, our main complaint is that the members of the class of '45 will be mightily outraged to have their own cherished class yell paraphrased and plagiarized (although the latter seems to be a common trait among KU people). But, no doubt, the overriding importance of such heroic values as school spirit outweighs any ethical, and all esthetic, considerations.
Michael McNalley,
College junior.
Short Ones
Vice-President Barkley is in the hospital with an eye disorder. Some of the sights in Washington are discouraging.
The New Hampshire primary, which President Truman called "eyewash" has possibilities of developing into a tear-jerker.
Evangelist Billy Graham is back on the soap box, we notice. Overlooking his violent oratory, it's relieving to hear from a man who doesn't hesitate to state his beliefs.
Mrs. Mary Lois Jones, Marshall, Mo, has been jailed because of sending "scurrilous and defamatory" matter through the mails to President Truman. Evidently she isn't impressed with the practice of supporting a state's favorite son.
In a "high price" riot in Rio de Janeiro, 30 persons were injured. The excitement was over a rapid rise in the price of meat. It looks like a high premium on steaks for black eyes.
Prabha Dutt Brahmachari, Hindu holy man challenging loquacious Prime Minister Nehru of India for a parliament seat, doesn't speak a word. He sits while his lieutenants do the talking. A policy worth considering for presidential candidates here at home.
KEN COLLINS
Newbold Morris Invades Crowded Investigating Field
There's a new investigator headed for Washington. His job in that over-crowded investigating profession is to direct the clean-up of the federal government.
The investigator's name is Newbold Morris, and his new title is that of Special Assistant Attorney General. He's a prominent, 50-year-old, New York City lawyer, and he calls himself "an Abraham Lincoln Republican."
Morris was appointed to the clean-up post by Attorney General J. Howard McGrath. President Truman put McGrath in over-all charge of the federal investigation and McGrath in turn (with HST's okay) appointed Morris, promising him "complete enthusiastic and unlimited cooperation." The appointment does not require Senate approval.
The strange part of all these goings on is that McGrath himself is under investigation by a House judiciary sub-committee and Morris's name has appeared in studies of a deal involving war surplus oil tankers. This tanker business will soon come under investigation by a Senate investigating sub-committee. (Of course it must be noted that investigation doesn't mean guilt—especially in investigation-happy Washington Morris very possibly will not even be called as a witness in the tanker investigation, though his name has figured in the deal.)
Morris says he never met McGrath until the Attorney General offered him the appointment on Jan. 30. He also says he was impressed with McGrath's "sincerity and good faith." And, most important of all, he says he will go to the "very top" in his investigation, even if it should involve his immediate superior, McGrath. He emphasizes that there will be no "white wash." The new investigator adds that his first job will be to investigate the justice department.
The end product of Morris's labors is to be a report giving:
(1) His estimates of the depth and scope of official misconduct.
(2) His recommendations for improving systems and procedures of appointing personnel and supervising their conduct after appointment.
Truman told him he was to ask for anything he wanted from any agency or department.
Newbold Morris began his political career in 1928 when he was named to the New York City Republican committee. He later served as president of the New York City council from 1938-1946, and he twice ran and was defeated by Democrat William O'Dwyer for the office of mayor of that city. After his second try in 1949 he devoted his time to private law practice. He is a member of a family important in the political life of New York for 300 years, and he even numbers a signer of the Declaration of Independence among his ancestors.
Prominent Republican critics of his appointment were Senators Karl E. Mundt of South Dakota; Robert A. Taft of Ohio, and Richard Nixon of California. Nixon termed the appointment a "White House phony"
Though he praised Morris as a lawyer, Senator Taft said he had no confidence in the proposed investigation because it would be under the justice department.
Replying to Taft's statement, Morris said, "I'm not under the department of justice. I'm completely independent . . . It is entirely non-political. I'm designated as a Special Assistant Attorney General, but I'm going to investigate the department of justice itself."
"Justice itself." At least everyone will (we hope) be thoroughly investigated, and with all this digging surely evil will out
Ellsworth Zahm.
'I Don't Live In An Igloo,' Alaskan Says
Thursday, February 7, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Ed Osborne, senior in architectural engineering, is like any other student—until he is asked the inevitable question, "Where are you from?"
Osborne braces himself for replies, "I'm an Alaskan."
After a moment of silence he hears such remarks as "You don't look like an Alaskan . . ." or "Do you live in an igloo?"
"There are about 2,000 tourists in Fairbanks during the summer. The main attraction is the gold mines, where there is the University of Alaska. The University kinds of courses but is particularly noted for its mining courses."
"It happens every time," Osborne said. "You'd think they expected Walt to be a four-headed monster. Alas, americans are like anyone in the United States."
"We get all the latest movies, radio programs, and magazines. We're up to date on everything and never forget ourselves as being unusual." he said.
"I don't live in an igloo either," he explained. "Everyone, including the Indians and Eskimos, live in houses."
Osborne was born in Fairbanks. He had never been outside of the territory until he came to the University in 1948. It seems strange to him to be an American and yet be considered an outsider.
Since Osborne is the only person enrolled at KU from Alaska he believes he should correct the misconceptions many persons have.
Osborne believes Alaska is wonderful place for a vacation.
"People think Fairbanks is high but it has a lower elevation than
A new weekly radio show dramatizing important and authentic incursions of Kansas history was being Wednesday on University radio KFKU.
New Radio Show Dramatizes Past
"Prairie Footprints" is a 15-minute dramatic show presented at 2:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Mrs. Ruby Motta, writer and producer of the show, the series would contend through it, the state's history will be emphasized, rather than individual persons.
John Herrington, journalism junior,
will be the announcer-narrator.
The KU Radio Players, an all-student
group, will be the actors.
Today's vignette of Kansas history dealt with the Lewis and Clark explorations. Mrs. Motta said subsequent shows would tell of Zebulun Pike and the first U.S. flag raised in Kansas, the Santa Fe Rail, the early missions, John Brown's activities and Quantrill's raid.
KFKU is heard at 1250 on the radio dial.
Engineers To Elect Officers
At 7:30 p.m. Todav
Election of officers of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will b held at 7:30 p.m. today in Lindley auditorium.
Plans for the Engineering exposition to be held April 3 and 4 also will be discussed at the meeting.
During World War I, Marine Corp aviation consisted of 282 officers and 2,180 enlisted men.
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a barrage of questions and slowly
Lawrence. The temperature ranges from 66 below to 103 degrees above. The average snowfall is about 30 inches a year. We ski, play basketball, tennis and even swim—outdoors."
"The owners of the depleted mines are against it because they would have their unproductive land taxed. But in the south where the
Alaskans are split on statehood, Osborne said.
canneries are, the people are for statehood. Then they could tax the cannies. Either way you look at it, it's really just a matter of taxes."
Osborne was most impressed with the good roads and nice residential districts in the United States.
"Everything in Fairbanks is crowded together. It's too cold to walk very far."
Osborne doesn't like the weather here. "It's too hot and humid."
When asked what he was going to do when he was graduated, Osborne said.
"Go back to Alaska, of course Things are dead around here."
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Page 4.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 7, 1957
B' Team To Play For March of Dimes
By JACKIE JONES
Daily Konson Sports Editor
The Jayhawk "B" basketball squad will meet the tall and talented Kansas State yearlings in a benefit game Friday night for the March of Dimes.
Tip-off time for the cage clash will be 7:30 in Hoch auditorium. Admission price is 50 cents for everyone, and the entire proceeds will be turned over to the March of Dimes campaign.
The young Jayhawks are undefeated in action this season, but will face their best opposition in a giant-sized pack of Wildcats. The game should be equal in thrills to the rugged varsity battles between the schools.
The Wildcats will boast such players as Jerry Jung, a 6-foot 14-inch
ALLEN KELLY
KEN BULLER
ALLEN KELLY KEN BULLER
freshman from Hutchinson, and several other boys who top the six and a half foot mark.
The Jayhawks were dealt a blow
K-State Ball Players Attacked By The Flu
The flu bug may take an active part in the Big Seven conference race. He invaded the Kansas State basketball camp and attacked three of the players.
Jesse Prisock, a regular, is under a doctor's care after taking penicillin shots, and Gene Stauffer, a sophomore, is in the student hospital. Jerry Jung, 6-11 center of the team team, also has been stricken.
No others are ailing yet, but Coach Jack Gardner is plenty worried.
Kansas State has an important conference battle with Missouri at Columbia Saturday, and the Wildcat "B" team meets the Kansas "E" team Friday. Feb. 8, in Hoch auditorium.
when Eldon Nickelson, 6-foot 6-inch freshman from Pittsburg was hospitalized, but the Kansas coach will rely on several boys who should provide plenty of speed.
Coach Harp expects to start Kenneth Buller and Jerry Alberts at the forward positions; Wesley Whitney, a 6-foot, 3-inch sophomore from Newton, at center and Allen Kelley and Jerry Bogue at the guard slots.
The Kansas "B" team has won all four of their games this season, defeating: Forbes Air Force base of Topeka, Olathe Naval base, Baker university and the Missouri "B" team.
Norway Picked To Win Crown
Norwegian athletes apparently aren't going to serve as the perfect hosts for the winter Olympics which get underway at Oslo next week.
Picked to win the Olympic team title in a United Press canvas of European sports experts last week, the Norwegians displayed championship form as they completely dominated pre-game meets during the weekend.
U. S. hopefuls, meanwhile, put up a game fight in most of the warm-ups but were forced to settle for the runner-up spots behind their more experienced and adept Norwegian rivals.
In the "Little Olympic games" at Oslo's Bislet stadium, speed skater Finn Hodt, the Norwegian outcast, captured first place in the overall standings by finishing first in the 1,500 meter sprint and seventh in the 10,000 meter endurance race Tuesday. He wound up with the winning low of 201,507 individual points.
Ken Henry of Chicago emerged as the leading Yank skater with 205,303 points in the final standings that earned him fifth place. Pat McNamara of Minneapolis was 11th with 207,330 points and Charles (Chuck) Burke of Chicago was 17th with 212,208 points.
The U.S. skaters did come away from the "little" games with one consolation. They won't have to face Hodt in the big show. The
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Norwegian was barred from competing in the Olympics last week on the grounds he served as a Nazi collaborator during the last war.
The Norwegians also were supreme in a ski-jumping tournament at Geithu, Norway, in which Art Tokle of Brooklyn, N.Y., turned in the day's longest jump but had to settle for fourth place in the final standings because he failed to score enough points on form.
Small Fan Likes Clyde
The winner was Svein Lein of Norway, whose best leap was 218 feet, six inches. Tokle soared 227 feet, 11 inches but he only wound up 215.6 points, compared to Lein's 216.3 points.
The U.S. Olympic ice hockey team managed to save the day by defeating Switzerland, 6 to 4, in warmup at Zurich, but almost got involved in a riot. Angry Swiss fans stormed the penalty box to fight with the Yank players and had to be dispersed by police and officials.
A 12-year-old basketball fan who saw all of the games at the preseason Big Seven tournament in Kansas City apparently knows what to consider when judging basketball teams. When he was recently asked by a Kansas City radio announcer to name his favorite team he replied, "Clyde Lovellet."
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Foster Wins Division In Final Night Of Play
By JACKIE JONES
The final night of the Women's Intramural basketball schedule was one of the best of the season, with a fast and talented Foste hall team winning the top game from an almost equally good Alph Chi Omega squad 46 to 42.
The Jayettes had little trouble in taking their division crown as they defeated Alpha Phi 46 to 19. This victory combined with a Freshman MJ upset of Kappa Kappa Gamma, 26 to 15, gave their division title to the Jayettes.
Alpha Chi Omega proved to be almost a match for the high scoring Foster six. They trailed 21 to 26 at the half, but in the last two quarters matched the winners point for point.
The Foster offense, boasting two varsity players in Shirley Mickelson and Ernestine Dehlinger, was up to its usual point producing level, but scoring honors for Foster went to Anita Philipp with 18. Mickelson had 17 and Dehlinger tallied 11.
The Jayettes had an easy time in defeating Alpha Phi, and will probably be a tough team to beat in the division play-offs, Jackie Jones led them in wins by points. Many Snead had 15, Joan Grone 3, and Su Buckingham had 2.
Virginia Brooks, Jappy Rau, Marlene Peterson and Mary Dearmitt played a good defensive game for the winners, but they could not Od down Mary Ann Mahoney. He scored 32 points for the Alpha team, while he mural scoring champion with a 36 point average per game. Jean Michaels scored 7 and Judy Buckley 3 for the losers.
The Jayette's defense was good, with Joyce Jones doing an outstanding job. Billie Davis, Dorothy Rexrode and Peggy Schick played one of their best games.
Phyllis Sims and Kathryn North
Cage Scores
Seton Hall 60, Fordham 41
Duquesne 64, Niagara 49
LaSalle 103, Geneva 74
Pennsylvania 82, Harvard 48
Massachusetts 65, USCG Acad. 54
Michigan 71, USCG Acad. 53
Massachusetts 65, USCG Acad. 54
Amherst 84, Tufts 63
Boston U. 75 Worcester Tech 59
Columbia 95, Brown 75
Carnegie Tech 76, Grove City 60
LaFayette 58, CCNY 49
Villanova 68, Delaware 61
Drexel Tech 56, Haverford 40
N. Hampshire 75, Am. Int. 63
Penn State 66, Rutgers 52
St. Joseph's (Pa.) 65, R.I. State 59
St. Francis (NY) 64, Iona 58*
Vermont 81, St. Michael's (Vt.) 73
Trenton State 73, Cheney State 37
Wilkes 64, Susquehanna 41
Newark Rutgers 86, Arnold 76
J. C. Smith 57, Lincoln 53
Cortland State 71, Ithaca 70
Clark 60, Northeastern 56
Fairfield 55, New Britain State 51
Panzer 93, Paterson State 71
Dayton 72, Louisville 71
Georgia 72, Georgia Tech 64
Loyola (Md) 68, John Hopkins 51
Kentucky 81, Mississippi 61
West. Virginia 80, N. Carolina 65
Texas Christian 52, Texas A&M 41
Overtime.
Jay SHOPPE
played the best game for the losers.
Sims scored 13 of the 19 Alpha Phi points, Betty Lewis had one, and North scored five.
The major upset of the night was the victory of Kappa Kappa Gamma
At the half the freshmen led 13 to 8, and before the final whistle they had stretched it to 26 to 15.
Sportswear New Spring Clothes Formals
Joan Leonhart led the scoring for the freshmen with 12 points, Betty Knupp had 2, and Flavia Robertson scored 11 points.
Joan Piller led the Kappa scoring with 12 points and Carolyn Armsby got the other three.
The two other games scheduled for last night were forfeited.
Kappa Alpha Theta won over Alpha Delta Pi by this method, as did Gamma Phi Beta over Freshman BL.
Larry Davenport, one of Kansas' top freshman cage stars was injured in practice yesterday. He suffered a sprained ankle, but Dean Nesmith, trainer, said the injury apparently was not severe.
835 Mass. Phone 771
Cage Star Hurts Ankle
Davenport, one of the best of the young crop of Jayhawk basketball players, has been an important in the last two Kansas victories.
He played in most of the Colorado game, and was responsible for several of the KU scores in the crucial last quarter, when the Jayhawks came on out top 73 to 68.
Nesmith believed that he would be able to play in the Iowa State game Monday night at Ames.
Baseball Man Tells His Story
That's the belief of Eddie Dyer the friendly former manager of the St. Louis Cardinals.
And there lies the story of why genial Eddie quit the game when most managers would have been looking for a boost in pay—just when he had seen one of his teams championship, in 1946, and four other teams, through 1950, give a very respectable account of themselves.
- Houston, Tex. — (U.P.) “Baseball’s the greatest game in the world. But don't kid yourself—it won't take care of you always.”
"But as far as I'm concerned there's nothing more pitiful in baseball than seeing a former great going down . . . down . . . down . until he finds himself in class B ball then finally out."
"From the very beginning I hadn't planned to stay in baseball all my life," he explained. "Don't get me wrong—I'm not trying to play Mr. Big because I know I'm not."
"All my life I've wanted to own
my own business. And no one realize
better that I that I wouldn't
have the position to had it not
been for baseball."
Rex Layne Favored In Boston Ring Event
Boston - (U.P.) - Young Rex Layne of Salt Lake City, Utah, is favored to outpunch craft Willie James of Boston in a 10-rounder at Boston Garden tonight and re-establish himself as a ranking heavyweight title contender.
YOUR EYES
Eye
should be examined today. Call
for appointment. Any lens or
prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Outstanding Values In
Thursday, February 7, 1952 University Daily Kansan
HAGGAR SLACKS for Spring
Alterations F R E E
Anl
FR
Fresh looking - smartly styled Haggar slacks in the colors that will be popular this spring. Glad to show you.
All Rayon Gabardines $6.95
Wool and Rayon $7.95
All Wool $12.95
811 Mass. St.
Gibbs Clothing Co.
BANQUET on your BUDGET ...3 TIMES A DAY!
Cheery good morning foods for wide-awake breakfasts . . . smacking-good foods for hearty lunches . . . thrilling foods for wonderful dinners—all are here at Rusty's or Coles . . . and all are low-priced to help you banquet on your budget 3 times a day—everyday! There'll never be a dull menu at your house when you do your food shopping here, because our bigger and better values mean bigger and better meals for your family. Rusty and Jimmy
号
Self-Service Meats
Fresh Cut-up Each
FRYERS 98c
Crescent Sliced lb.
BACON 29c
Fresh Sliced lb.
PORK LIVER 35c
Our Butcher's Homemade lb.
HAM SALAD 59c
Ready Cut Alaska lb.
KING CRAB LEGS 95c
Red lb.
SALMON STEAKS 73c
TOMATOES
Values Galore
Light Meat Grated 6 oz. Can
TUNA 19c
Trailer Sweet No. 303 Can
PEAS 10c
Cut-rite 125 ft. Roll
WAX PAPER 19c
Flemings or Folgers 1 lb. Tin
COFFEE 79c
Fisher's 2 lb. Box
CHEESE SPREAD 69c
Fruits & Vegetables
Red Ripe Slicing 1 lb. Tube
TOMATOES 13c
Crisp Solid Large Heads
LETTUCE 2-19c
Russet 10 lb. Bag
POTATOES 59c
Calif. Navel 344's 2 Doz.
ORANGES 39c
Fine For Salads Each
CALAVOS 19c
OPEN WEEK DAYS 9:00 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAYS 9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
RUSTY'S Food in Center 23RD AND LOUISIANA OPEN SUNNES AND SUNDAYS 1CA LOTS OF THIS PARKING SPACE COLE'S Food in Center 2ND, and LINCOLN LOW PRICES EVERYDAY EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
---
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 7, 1952
Leap Year Odds Three To Two Against Men Getting Proposals
The odds are at least three to two against a young man getting proposed to in the United States this leap year, the Institute of Life Insurance reports this month.
According to census figures based on the nation's population in 1950, there are just about half as many young bachelors in America as there are young spinsters. But the supply of bachelors and unmarried women in this country is not very large, for two-thirds of everybody in the U.S. over the age of 14 is now already married.
The preponderance of young bachelors over unmarried young women in America this year has come about because girls in this country customarily marry men older than themselves. The result is that half the girls and women between 18 and 25 years of age are married but only a third of all young men.
Men who are over 25 have a better chance of getting proposed to this year than do younger men, and the odds are quite definitely in favor of unmarried men over 45. The number of men and women in the age group from 25 to 45 who are single, widowed, or divorced is about even; over 45, there are nearly twice as many eligible women as men.
In 1890, about half the population over the age of 14 was married and the other half was not. In 1952, only 33 per cent are unmarried. This has occurred even though the number of widowers, widows and divorced people in our population has been increasing.
Westminster Group Dedicates Hymnals
The dedication of 60 new hymnals and an international song service highlighted the meeting of Westminster fellowship Sunday.
Cantata Domino, widest used publication of the World Student christian federation was dedicated by Kay Conrad, College junior, president.
The book, which contains hymns of all countries, has each song's lyrics in three or four languages and symbolizes the one fellowship in Christ around the world. It is printed on paper from the Student Christian movement in Finland with money from the Hazen foundation of the U. S. A.
Songs led by four Americans and our foreign students were sung in Japanese, French, German, Spanish and English.
In addition Dr. John H. Patton, on terminal leave from his duties as U. S. Air Force chaplain, was welcomed home to Westminster where he was former administrative director.
New commissions for the second semester also met Sunday. Student commission chairmen are Robert all, Madison Murray, Reinhold Schmidt and Janet Stewart, all college sophomores, and Shirley hompson, education junior.
Kappa Phi To Have Panel Discussion
A panel of nine girls will lead a discussion on "A Christian Views of United Nations" at a meeting ofappa Phi, national Methodist women students' club, at 7 p.m. Friday in Danforth chapel.
Lessie Hinchee, Johnnie Lou Shafer, Virginia Copp, Mary Cadwalader, Charlene Smith, Barbara Swisher, Jo Wampler, Orinne Gray and Barbara Wood will compose the waler.
Miss Shafer and Miss Copp are in charge of the program. Margaret Matimer and Marie Wellman are in charge of the worship service.
PRECISION
WATCH
REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Marriage records checked back over the past fifty years show that whatever may account for the nation's growing number of families, leap year and its special prerogatives to the female sex have had little to do with it.
Nothing happens to the nation's marriage rate in leap year. It neither goes up very much or down very much. If anything, as matter of fact, it is apt to go down. It did, in any case, in five of the last eight leap years.
Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed
As for February—whether it has 28 or 29 days, and even though it is month of St. Valentine—February is the month when in past years there have usually been fewer marriages than during any other of the other 11 months.
Wolfson's
Call 675
743 Mass.
Lutheran Student association cost supper, 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran church, Rev H. L. Smith president of Lawrence Ministerial alliance, speaker, "Mission at Home."
Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m.
Monday, 203 Strong.
Engineerettes card party, 8 p.m.
Monday. 1247 Tennessee.
Official Bulletin
Deutscher Verein Donnerstag 5 p.m. Fraser 502. Neue lieder, scheraden, taenze.
Sasnak meeting, 7:30 tonight, Women's gym.
Students enrolled in Western Civilization who have not yet arranged for an appointment this semester must do so by Monday.
Psychology club, 7:30 tonight, 9
Carruth Hall Names Lambert
Women Earn Sizeable Share Of U.S. Income
Joan Lambert, journalism junior,
was recently elected president of
Carruth hall for the spring semester.
Women are likely to contribute a larger share of the nation's family income this year than at any time since World War II.
Other officers elected were Julia Bolz, secretary; Nancy Manspeaker, treasurer; Beth Fife, historian; Mary Wiltse, scholarship chairman,
Even though a serious labor shortage may not develop in the next eight or ten months, the demand for women workers in 1952 will undoubtedly increase.
High prices are leading wives to supplement family income by outside earnings and there is now a growing number of "war brides" in our population again, whose husbands are overseas or in training camps. These pressures raised the need for women to work than half a million during 1951 and they will add hundreds of thousands of women to the labor force in 1952.
in owning life insurance and in saving money, women in the past few years have acted pretty much the same way as men have—they have saved and bought life insurance to protect their dependents, and to provide for their own future.
In accepting additional family and business responsibilities, women have built their ownership of life insurance to a fifth of all life insurance in the U. S.
On several scores, the women who have jobs or are self-employed today are different from the women's labor force at the beginning of World War II. For one thing, as a group, today's women workers are older and there are also more managers, officials and proprietors of business, and more women employed in the "white collar" fields.
Another difference, perhaps the most important of all, is that so many of the women who are in the labor force today are married. In one marriage out of every four in the U. S. now, the wife earns some outside income.
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LAST TIMES TODAY "TRIO"
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1
I was an
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Stark revelations of America's "Mata Hari"
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Strong hall Speakers from Alcoholics Anonymous. All welcome.
KuKu, club, 7:15 tonight, 10 Green, Election.
International club meeting, 7:30 tonight, Pine room, Memorial Union. Dr. Sandelius speaker, "Constitutional Government and World Crisis" Foreign and American graduate students invited.
mummural Bridge tournament,
7:15 p.m., Feb. 12, 13, 14, Recreation
room, Memorial Union. Register
SUA office as a team by Monday
noon. Enter fee 50 cents per team
Women's Rifle club meeting, 5 today. Pine room, Memorial Union. All members attend, bring dues. Student Library committee 4:30 today, Hawk's Nest.
Travel Service
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COME IN TODAY!
MOSSER WOLF MOSSER-WOLE
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OUT OF THE VAST SAHARA COMES A TALE OF THRILLING Technicolor Adventure!
ADVENTURE BLAZES ACROSS THE BURNING SANDS!
FLAME of ARABY
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starring
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U1
SUSAN CABOT • LON CHANEY • BUDDY BAER
Matinee 2:30 - Evening Shows 7 and 9 p.m. Features
3:10-7:40-9:40 - Continuous Shows Sat. from 1 p.m.
Open 12:45 — Also: Color Cartoon-Movietone News
STARTS PREVUE SATURDAY 11:15 P.M.
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The Model and the Marriage Broker
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The Model and the Marriage Broker 20 CENTURY
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25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
TRANSPORTATION
TRANSPORTATION or shore ride from
59 MWF. Phone FE 8918.
RIDERS WANTED: Leave K.C. 7:30 a.m.
Leave KU 5:50 p.m. Highway 10. Call
Bob Breedlove, Indep. 8:00
p.m. 2-7
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange international and international travel whether tour or business. Photo Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Service, 1015 Mass. **tf**
Ask us about family rates, skys coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
passage not for European travel next
week. Contact your local National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
REOPENED for Business: Oread Barber Shop, 1237, Oread. Hours: 8:00 to 5:30 for Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaning for Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaning Charley Coffman and Bernard Borgel, 11
BUSINESS SERVICE
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate device Call ME
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Reece, 883 Lm. Lapt. 4, upstairs. Ph. 2775J.
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tf
FING: Theses, legal papers, term
tapers, miscellaneous. Accurate work,
attention. 10 years these types
experience. M. Shields, 1209 Ohio, Pa.
1601.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwich, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tf**
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604. 1109 Mass. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipi-
ment area with area maximizing fast, efficient service. Bowman & Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont.
Free pickup and delivery. tt
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop. Just walk up to one-stop pet shop and help everyone for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Last Times Tonite
Open 6;45
Dennis Morgan
Virginia Mayo
"PAINTING THE
CLOUDS WITH
SUNSHINE"
—And—
Edward G. Robinson
"OPERATION X"
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
Richard Grayson "CHAIN OF CIRCUMSTANCE" and一
Charles Starrett
"CYCLONE FURY"
Plus:
Last Chapter
"FLYING DISC MAN"
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks and sandwiches, malts, home-made piees and cakes. Tree parking space for customer orders. 10 a.m.-midnight. Crystal Cafe. 609 Vt.
FOR SALE
RENTAL TYPEWRITERS! Both new and used, portable and standard models, are available. The easy way to better, neater papers. One at the Student Union Book Store.
STILL NO INCREASE in price on 140 sheet pad of yellow second sheets. Only 25c at your Student Union Book Store. 8
INDEX your vocabulary and language books with the new Superior Cloth tab A set from A to Z for just 10c. Student Union Book Store.
Make this your HEADQUARTERS fo College Outline Series, Schaum's Out lines, and other study aids. Studen Union Book Store.
SMITH-CORONA slent portable type-
writer with case; used very little
Original cost $84.50. Sale price $54.50
See Dr. Beggando, 16 Strength. 8
SPECIAL RATES for students on Time,
Life, Fortune, and Newsweek Magazines.
Take subscriptions to all magazines,
P.S. Books a rebate tool Student Book Store.
8
RCA VICTOR radio-phonograph console
Hewlett Packard 1205
Shellahss, phone 284; 1100 Ind.
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands to music with a clock radio. See these values at Goodrich, 929 Mass. 2-13
PLYMOUTH '49 Special Deluxe, excel-
lent dealer price. 2014W 2014W
1949 CHEVROLET convertible. Deluxe radio and heater; clean; low mileage; good rubber. Priced to sell. Call 715 or 11
FOR RENT
ROOM FOR BOYS; nicely furnished,
single rooms; convenient to KU and
large classrooms; double to share
junior in School of Business—twin beds.
1303 Vermont.
AT 707 WEST 12th. Double room, with twin beds for girls. Also will serve home-cooked meals to boys or girls. Call 964. 2-7
TRAILERS FOR RENT. two wheel and four wheels. Have some good used trailers, also a 1938 Ford two-door, good one. Hatchell T rental trailer. North 3rd. 2-11
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
612 Miss, $512 each a month
1222 Miss. Phone 495.
ROOFS, double and single. See at 1312
Ohio. 8
BOARDERS WANTED! Good food, home cooked! Great companionship at the Nu Sigma Nu house. Very informal. Call 366 today for information. 8
LOST
PAIR OF horn-rimmed glasses Sunday
afternoon. Call Allie Deem, phone 358. 7
MISCELLANEOUS
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
buyers. buyers. W. Jan. V. An-
Almen, 3110R.
AGGRESSIVE LAW STUDENT—wanted
$100 to $300 the first part of this semester.
For further details, write Terrace
Street, Filt. Michigan, Inc., #29 Margaret
Street, Filt. Michigan.
HELP WANTED
Doctor Says Colds And Influenza Differ
Don't panic if your nose runs. It probably isn't fatal.
There is a difference between the common cold, or flu if you wish to get it, and a bacterial infection. I Canuteson, director of the University, Health service, said today.
Several persons in this area no doubt have contracted colds, but there have been no cases of influenza diagnosed at the Health center recently. "This has been a very good year, as far as health is concerned," Dr. Camuteson said.
STAR STAR
We predict the new year's No.1 maker of merriment will be
ROOM*FOR*ONE MORE
Thursday, February 7, 1952
Make room to grin your broadest and laugh your longest at the fellow (Cary Grant) who made room for the girl he loved
(Betsy Drake) and forgot to lock the door!
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Presented with Exceptional Delight by Warner Bros.
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JAYHAWKER
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11:15
SUNDAY
APO To Observe National Boy Scout Week On Campus
Alpha Phi Omega, a national service fraternity composed of former Boy Scouts now in the University, will observe national Boy Scout week which began Wednesday and lasts through Tuesday Feb.12.
The week marks the 42nd anniversary of the incorporation of the Boy Scouts of America. A three year program, "Forward on Liberty's Team," will be launched. The 2-900,000 boys and leaders through an practical program that seeks to build sound citizenship in the future.
At 12:45 p.m. Friday, President Truman will greet 12 representative Eagle scouts. Mr. Truman, honorary president of Boy Scouts of America, will receive a scroll stating the objectives of the new program.
Arthur Wahlstedt, journalism
senior and newly elected president of Alpha Phi Omega, said that the fraternity has not yet complete plans for observance of the week.
Members of Alpha Phi Omegma maintain the lost and found department in the Student Union and world with local Boy Scout troops when needed.
Other recently elected officers of the fraternity are Thurston Smith engineering junior, secretary-treasurer, and Max Zimmerman, college sophomore, vice-president.
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4
KON-TIKI
BY TWOK HEYFDANAI
SOL LESSER presents
ESSER
TIKI
Told by THOR HEYERDAHL,
author of the best-selling book
- LAST TIMES TONITE *
Robert Ryan in
"THE SET UP"
Extra - Tex Beneke and
Glen Miller Orchestra
STARTS
TOMORROW
Matinee Friday
2 p.m. Show
Starts 2:30 p.m.
Evening
Features At
7:38 - 9:29 p.m.
our times.
The
saga of six men who deliberately risked their lives to prove a theory! On a primitive type raft of balsa logs they drifted over uncharted seas from Peru to the isles where the hula girls wait! 101 days and 4,300 miles of storm, sunshine, peril and peace. No contact with civilization. No sight of ship or shore. Nothing but themselves and their astounding adventures with strange man-eating monsters of the deep—and their heroic efforts to keep busy, alive—and afloat!... An epic of daring—hailed as the greatest sea adventure of our times!
New PATEE PHONE 321
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, February 7, 1952
A. M. S.
RADIO PLAYERS IN ACTION—The Radio Players are shown practicing for one of their two dramatic productions over radio station KFKU. From left to right around the table are Wilson O'Connell, Robert Zurbuchen, Shirley Tinsley, Mrs. Ruby LeNeva Motta, Marilyn Button, and Max Zimmerman.
News Roundup
London—(U.P.)—Elizabeth II, who went away a princess one week ago, came back a queen today.
Britain's Greatest Men Meet Their New Queen
The airliner bringing Elizabeth and Prince Philip home from East Africa landed at London airport at 4:19 p.m. (10:19 a.m. CST), some 36 hours after King George VI died in his sleep at his country home, Sandringham.
Prime Minister Winston Churchill, head of the government, and the Duke of Gloucester, brother of the late King, led the handful of Britain's greatest men who stood bare-headed on the field to meet the woman who is now their queen.
At Sandringham Queen Mother Elizabeth and her younger daughter, Princess Margaret left the house in which King George had died and drove to the nearby Church of St. Mary Magdelen for a half-hour service for the King. Both were dressed in black.
It was expected that the King's body would be transferred from Sandringham house to the Church of St. Mary Magdelen on the estate grounds after dusk today. It will be placed before the altar.
Sometime this week-end, the 1st battalion of Grenadier guards will escort the King's body to London, where it will lie in state in the Great Hall of Westminster, adjoining the Houses of Parliament, until the funeral.
Washington—(U.P.)—Sen. Robert A. Teft today threw his support behind a senate bloc determined to limit President Truman's power to send ground troops to North Atlantic treaty nations.
Taft Supports Bloc
The Ohio Republican backed Sen. Arthur V. Watkins (R-Utah), who proposed requiring the consent of Congress before America's armed forces could be sent to the territory of any NATO power "in a manner that would necessarily involve the United States in war."
Stassen Into Races
Washington — (U.P.) — Harold E. Stassen announced today he will enter the New Jersey and West Virginia primaries in his bid for the Republican presidential nomination.
In both states he expects to be competing mostly against forces favoring the candidacy of Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, against whom Stassen already has entered several other state primaries.
Adenauer Warns
Bonn, Germany—(U.P.)—West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer warned today that 30 Soviet divisions are poised permanently in East Germany "ready to march."
The West's only salvation, he told the Bundestag (lower house of parliament), is to build its defenses so fast that Russia will realize aggression is too risky.
Pamunjom, Korea—(U.P.) B o t h United Nations and Communist negotiators made concessions today that brought agreement closer on prisoner exchange and troop rotation.
Communist deputies interrupted repeatedly as the 76-year-old chancellor opened a two-day foreign affairs debate. Outside, strong police forces armed with fire hoses blocked off the building from 2,000 Red demonstrators.
Agreement Closer
The UN command held off a second meeting of full truce delegations on the final agenda item while awaiting instructions from Washington on a peace conference proposed by the Communists Wednesday that would drag in all the political problems of the Far East.
Washington—(U,P)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has informed his managers that he will do his Republican pre-convention campaigning—if any—in uniform and from Paris.
Ike Not Returning
Topeka—(U.P.)—Kansas county health officers reported 2,676 cases of influenza last week and state health officials said there were many more unreported cases.
The general's decision against returning to the United States before the July Republican national convention jolted some of his backers. They had been confident that Ike would make one or more pre-convention personal appearances. His friends are eager to get the Eisenhower smile and oratory on the road.
"This undoubtedly is not all of the cases in the state," Irvin G. Franzen, health statistician, said. He pointed out that only three cases were reported from Shawnee county when many more were believed to exist.
The report was made at the direction of Dr. James M. Mott, state epidemiologist, after several schools closed to study the greatest number of cases of the disease.
Art Museum To Display New Drawings Today
A group of drawings by Edward Milcarth of the University of Louisville will go on display in the Museum of Art today.
Many Flu Cases
Prof. John Maxon, director of the museum, said Mr. Milcarth is considered one of the leading young American artists.
The drawings are in the style of the sixteenth century. They were lent to the University by Durlard Brothers of New York. The display will hang through February.
Radio Players Enjoy Their Work Of Producing Dramatic Radio Shows
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, but the Radio Players like their work.
By BOB NOLD
Players like their work.
The group puts in long hours but has a lot of fun practicing for its two dramatic productions, "The Flying Carpet" and "Prairie Footprints."
Studio A in KFKU is reserved by the players on Monday and Tuesday afternoons for rehearsals, and on Wednesday and Thursday nights for rehearsals and tape recordings of the productions. The tape recordings are then presented on KFKU at the designated times.
The rehearsals are conducted informally. They are concerned with getting acquainted with the script, learning to pick up cues and becoming familiar with the characters portrayed.
The productions are written and produced by Mrs. Ruby LeNeva Motta, script writer-producer for KFKU!
"Flying Carpet?" dramatizes literature for children in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades. "Prairie Footprints," a presentation of Kansas history, is also adapted for children in these grades. Mrs. Moen, Kansai teachers responded enthusiastically to the idea of a history series.
This is the first semester KFKU has presented two dramatic productions a week.
The Radio Players meetings are called whenever needed. They are concerned with discussion of the conduct of players, meeting schedules and planning for social events such as a Christmas party, initiation of new members, picnics and visiting professional studios.
Officers are Wilson O'Connell, graduate student, president; Shirley Tinsley, college sophomore, vicepresident; Jo Anna March, college sophomore, secretary, and Bob
Zurbuchen, business senior, treasurer.
Other members are Max Zimmerman, Dorothy O'Connell, Jerry Knudson, Mark Gilman, Marilyn Button and Dick Sheldon, all college sophomores; and Russell Wigglewsworth and Ernest Dade, both
college freshmen.
college Tradesman,
and there are 21 Radio
Work Shop Players. To become
regular Radio Player members, they
must meet three requirements;
They must be in three radio plays, show quality and versatile voices, and be approved by experienced radio player members.
The most recent Radio Work Shop Players are Caroline West, college sophomore, and Frank LaBan, college junior. They were accepted Thursday at tryouts.
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KU English Students
Mourn King's Death As One Of Family
The death of King George VI came as a shock and surprise to the two English students on the campus, as well as English subjects all over the world.
Hugh McKenzie, graduate student from Sanderstead, England, and John Davidson, graduate student from Ashington, North Umberland, England, were surprised and concerned to hear of the death.
Davidson heard the news in class Wednesday morning, while McKenzie heard the news over the radio early that morning.
Both agreed- that although the King had been ill, no one had expected such a sudden death. They expressed the opinion that if there had been any obvious danger, Elizabeth would not have gone to Africa.
The two English students found it difficult to express their feelings.
Texas Folklore Expert To Talk Here Thursday
tense audience, who hoped he could get through without stumbling. The last few years he accomplished this feat admirably.
"In many families it will be the same as the loss of the family," McKenzie said.
"Everyone admires that sort of man whatever their nationality. He has become a symbol of determination and accomplishment to the English people and the world," McKenzie said.
He added that King George VI did one of the most difficult jobs in the best way possible, especially by overcoming his handicap of stuttering. McKenzie described King George's annual Christmas message as always being listened to by a
Mr. Dobie's lecture will be sponsored by the departments of English, history, and zoology.
James Frank Dobie, Texas folklore expert, will speak on "Tales of the Southwest" at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 12, in Fraser theater.
Mr. Dobie has been a member of the department of English at the University of Texas for a number of years. From 1923-25 he was chair-
Daily Kansan
KLWN To Air Eldridge Speech
Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology, will speak at 9:45 a.m. Sunday on KLWN's program, Sociology on the Air.
"Of. By And For the People." will be the subject of Dr. Eldridge's talk. Dr. Eldridge, a member of the University faculty for more than 30 years, came to KU after having taught at Columbia university, Smith college and Rockford college.
Dr. Eldridge's textbook, "Fundamentals of Sociology: A Situational Analysis," was published the past year by the Thomas Y. Crowell company. Dr. Eldridge was editor of Crowell's social science series.
His other books include "New Social Horizons," "Public Intelligence," "Development of Collective Enterprise," "The Organization of Life" and "Major Problems of Democracy."
49th Year
James Burgeney, director of Student Union Activities, said the session is an "attempt to provide an atmosphere whereby any student can discuss problems or interesting topics that they would like to express a view on."
Bull Session Set For 7:30
A chance to get better acquainted and to air some questions or opinions will be offered at 7:30 tonight in the Student Union music room when a bull session will be held
No.85
Although not a primary objective, he said, it is hoped that this opportunity will be utilized by the American and foreign countries to get better acquainted with each other's countries.
There will be no set agenda and the atmosphere will be strictly informal and casual. The session will last as long as the participants wish. Mr. Burgoyne said the sessions start in the music room but usually end in the Hawk's Nest over a cup of coffee.
Friday, February 8, 1952
Chakravarty To Talk At Wesley Sunday
Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities and personal friend of the late Mahatma Gandhi, will speak on 10th February of the Westernday foundation, Sunday, Feb. 10, at the First Methodist church.
Candidates are Ronald Sammons, college sophomore, and Max Valentine, college junior, president; Darrell Brown, college sophomore, and Rosemary Scheuerman, education junior, vice-president, and Wanda Gugler and Barbara Thomas, college freshmen, secretary.
During the meeting candidates for office in Wesley foundation will speak for their opponents.
WEATHER
Roger Youmans, college freshman is in charge of worship.
Fair and moderately colder this afternoon and tonight. Saturday generally fair and warmer, low tonight in 20's. High Saturday 50's west to near 50 east.
Shoemaker To Open Humanities Lectures
William H. Shoemaker, professor of romance languages, will open the fifth annual Humanities lectures series with a speech on "The Generation of '98 and the Question of Literary Responsibility," in Fraser theater at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Professor Shoemaker has been chairman of the department of romance languages since 1983. He received his bachelor of arts degree in 1924, his master of arts in 1928 and his doctor of philosophy degree in 1934, all from Princeton University where he taught in the department of Spanish for 11 years.
He also has written a book on the early Spanish theater and has published editions of Spanish literature. He has produced two other volumes in collaboration with other authors and written nearly two dozen articles and reviews.
Spanish and Portuguese in 1950. He is an associate editor of "Symposium," a journal of comparative literature.
A member of the Modern Language association, Professor Shoemaker was president of the American Association of Teachers of
Science Vs.Religion Problem Solved By Islam,Hakim Says
Islam has completely solved the problem of science disagreeing with religion, Dr. Khalifa Abdul Hakim of Lahore, Pakistan, told a capacity audience in Strong auditorium Thursday afternoon.
"It is Islam which has originated many clarifying relationships between God and man, between man and nature, and between man and man." Dr. Hakim said.
Dr. Hakim, director of the Institute of Islamic Culture at Lahore, was brought to this country last December by Notre Dame university to address the fifth convocation of Natural Law Institute at the University Law School.
The educator, author, and philosopher said that Islam treats religion as a natural law. It is the "realization of the essential nature of man which has been constituted the nature of God." So when a scientist studies the phenomenons of nature he is merely seeking to know God, not to refute him.
7 Faculty Members To Go To Emporia
March 15 Deadline For Senior Photos
Seven faculty members of the University will go to Emporia tomorrow where they will meet Henry Steele Commager, history writer, who will be on the campus of Kansas State Teachers college.
Mr. Commager, a member of the faculty of Columbia university, is the author of "The American Mind," and editor of "The Blue and the Gray" and "Documents of American History."
The faculty members who will attend the Saturday morning meeting and luncheon are: Kenneth Beasley, instructor in political science; Nino LoBello, instructor in sociology; Ambrose Saricks, assistant professor of history; Marston McCluggage, associate professor of sociology; Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology; William H. Cape, instructor in political science, and Lawrence S. Bee, professor of home economics and sociology.
All graduating seniors should make an appointment to have their pictures taken at Hixon's studio as soon as possible. The pictures must be taken before March 15 if they are to appear in the Jayhawker. The total expense is $2.81.
Dr. Hakim went on to say that "there are no chosen people. Islam alone has cured society of racialism and nationalism." Islam has abolished classes and castes. Islam (the eldest son's right of inheritance of succession). It gave women rights that they had never known before.
"The first day Pakistan was granted its independence, the large estates and landlordism were done away," he said. "This was a step away from segregation."
Social Training Plan Approved
He also cited the tolerance displayed by members of the Islamic faith. No effort was made to convert them. A 20-year reign, in that country, he said.
Islam has abolished the use of priests in its Moslem worship. Instead of this, private individuals serve as prayer leaders at the meetings. Dr. Hakim said this practice grew out of the corruption found among the paid leaders of the religion.
Islam has sought to put religion on a more positive basis. It has abolished asceticism among its Moslem followers. It seeks to teach them to appreciate the good life. The followers of Islam seek only to know God in his natural state.
The psychiatric social work training program developed by the University department of social work has been fully accredited by the American Association of Schools of Social Work and the American Association of Psychiatric Society Workers, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced today.
Prof. Esther Twente, chairman of the department, said that Miss Ursula Lewis, associate professor of social work, has had the primary responsibility for the new psychiatric social work curriculum. The U.S. Public Health service has made several grants to assist the University in establishing the program.
Accreditation means that all graduates of the program are now eligible for positions that demand fully trained psychiatric social workers. Miss Twente said that many hospitals and clinics, and family and child services, employ social workers with this specialty. The demand for such personnel consistently has been much greater than the supply.
Several KU alumni of this program already are employed in the Topeka State hospital, the Winter VA hospital, the Child Guidance Kansas City, Mo., and the U.S. Discipline Barracks, Pt. Leavenworth
The KU department of social work, organized in 1946, offers a fully accredited two-year graduate program. The minimum program of four semesters and a summer session leads to the master's degree.
Besides training for psychiatric social work, the department prepares workers for child and family welfare positions, for jobs in social group work and community organization.
Having received accreditation for all its curricula, the department is planning to expand its research program, Miss Twente said.
Alumnus Gets Post At Yale
Charles Hoffhaus, a graduate of the University, was elected secretary of the executive board of the New Haven Legal Aid association at Yale university where he is attending the law school.
ROTC Captain To Duty Soon
ROTC Captain to Daryll Scott.
Capt. Glalvewell will arrive March 15 to assume duties as an infantry instructor in ROTC. Capt. Glidewell, a graduate of West Point, is returning from Korea. He replaces Capt. Willis B. McCarty, who is returning to civilian life.
man of the department of English at Oklahoma A&M. During 1943-44 he was visiting professor of American history at Cambridge university in England.
When he was awarded the honorary degree of Master of Arts from Cambridge the citation read in part, "What he doesn't know about Longhorn cattle isn't worth knowing."
Mr. Dobie became interested in the legends and folklore of Texas when he managed his uncle's ranch on the Nueces river in Texas in 1920.
In 1932 he traveled 2,000 miles on muleback gathering folklore of Texas. Mr. Dobie did much of his research around campfires, at trading posts, and in chuck wagons.
Some of the books Mr. Dobie has written are, "The Ben Lilly Legend," "The Longhorns," and "The Voice of the Coyote."
38 To Attend ROTC Camp
Thirty-eight juniors enrolled in the Army ROTC will attend summer training camps in eight states, Col. Edward F. Kumpe, Army ROTC commander said today.
The students will train for a six-week period from June 21 to August 1 in camps divided according to the branch of the service in which they receive their commission upon being graduated from the University.
The number in each branch and the camps where they will be stationed are as follows: engineers, seven to Fort Lewis, Wash.; infantry, 13 to FT. Benning GA; quarrier, 16 to Fort Lee, Va.; armament; three to Fort Knox Ky.; ordinance, two to Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Md.
Transportation, one to Fort Eustace, Va.; artillery, three to Fort Sill, Oka; military police and signal corps, two to Camp Gordon, Ga.; Chemical corps, one to Fort McClellan, Va., and pharmacy and medical corps, one to Fort Sam Houston, Tex.
Lutherans To Show Movie Tonight At 8
"Venture of Faith," a feature motion picture will be shown at Immanuel Lutheran church, 17th and Vermont, at 8 tonight.
Marjorie Lord and Robert Clark, who have the leading roles, play the parts of university students.
The film is based on a true story concerned with the students of Valparaiso university. It is the story of determined engineering students who built their own engineering building.
There will be no admission charge, but a free will offering will be taken. Gamma Deltans invite everyone to attend.
Murphy To Attend Meeting In Chicago
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy left last night to attend a meeting of KU alumni at Chicago.
Dr. Murphy attended a luncheon given in his honor this noon. Tonight he will speak to an informal gathering. Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, will also attend this meeting.
Dr. Murphy will return to KU in the middle of the week.
Undesirable Rooms Offered Students
Some highly undesirable rooms have been advertised recently in local papers, including the Kansan, Mrs. Ruth Nash, housing secretary, said today.
Although most housing advertised is acceptable, at least one room with an unvented gas stove and very poor sanitary conditions has been offered, she said.
"Students need not live under such conditions to be close to the
campus," Mrs. Nash explained. The University housing office, 220 Strong hall, has a long list of satisfactory rooms available.
Students knowing of rooms heated by unvented gas stoves or of any third floor rooms lacking access to a fire escape should report them to the housing office for investigation. Such rooms are unapproved by the University and may be dangerous to live in.
Any other unsatisfactory conditions in rooming houses should also be reported so that changes may be made in the listings or in the conditions in the house, Mrs. Nash said.
Fall Semester Grades Ready
Grades for the fall semester will be available starting Monday, Feb. 11 through Wednesday, Feb. 13 at the Registrar's office.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, February 8,1952 Letters
Daily Kansan Editorials
Absence Of Members An Ailment Of ASC
Eight members of the All Student Council were absent from the meeting Tuesday night. This is something of a record, at least for the last year, although three or four members are usually missing at every meeting.
The eight representatives probably went to "The Bartered Bride," stayed home and studied, or even went to a movie in preference to the meeting. Why? Because "the Council doesn't do anything anyway" is the usual excuse.
It's a good one, most students agree. The present administration did secure a half day of grace before final week, and set up a housing committee, and is struggling for universal quiz files. Considering the ASC's limited power, the present Council is probably more constructive than any before it. But it has been a fight all the way, and the average student still doesn't see much that the Council does around the campus.
So the members, elected amid much bitterness last spring, now show up at meetings only when they feel like it.
Frequently they are valid excuses. However, even more often, they are alibis by which we attempt to justify our laziness.
But buried in the "six proposals" the depleted Council took action on Tuesday is one measure which may be cause for hope. A committee was appointed to look into the plans for reorganization of the Council. If they come up with a plan which will insure a fair representation of all student groups on the Council, without cut-throat political parties, the Council may begin to merit the trust of the University administration.
The reasons many of us give for not attending church while at school away from home are numerous and varied.
The Council can certainly see its own ills when its members look around the empty Pine room table. It's up to the Council, for the sake of the students it represents, to cure itself. —A.L.S.
Reasons For Skipping Church Often Excuses For Laziness
The weaknesses in some of the more common reasons are humorously illustrated by adapting them to the heading, "Why I Don't Attend the Movies." The result looks like this;
1. The manager of the theater has never asked me to go.
1. The management of the theater has never asked me to go.
2. There is no special program for the college students.
4. Every time I go they ask me for money.
5. I went so regularly back home that I don't need to go now.
7 I don't like a lot of the people I meet there.
8. I don't always agree with the theater's choice of shows.
9. The audience doesn't seem to be friendly enough.
10. The shows are always in the evenings and on week ends, and that is the only time **1** have for study. —Joe Taylor.
Quill Club Chooses Two College Women
Emily Enos and Eleanor Burton college freshman, were chosen as new members of Quill club Tuesday night.
The group plans to have two faculty members as speakers twice a month. Robert Ziesenis, college senior, was appointed program chairman in charge of arranging for the speakers.
In order to have more time to read and discuss manuscripts, the club will meet for two hours at night twice a month and for two one-hour afternoon periods.
The county clubs, sponsored by Statewide activities, will again promote high school activities in their local area during spring vacation.
Plans are being made for parties, meetings and assemblies.
The objectives of the organization are to create good will and interest concerning KU among students in local high schools, to raise funds for a Jayhawker to be given to high schools within the county, and to provide hosts for high school students visiting the campus.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU.376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn,
Associate Editor, National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, New York City.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-In-Chief Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants Anne Snyder Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahm
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman
Joe Losteic, Jim Powers
City Editor ... Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newman
Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
Telegraph Editor ... Charles Burch
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Max Thompson
Society Editor ... Diannie Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Paulynne Patterson
Sports Editor ... Jackie Jones
News Advisor ... Victor Danilov
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
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Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year, add $1 a semester if in Lawrence. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Letters:
Reader Disagrees With Word Usage
Dear Sirs:
What is a politician? Who are these professionals who "can't always control the convention delegates?" Reading your Feb. 5 editorial concerning Senator Kefauver, one might be led to believe that your yardstick for measuring the degree of a Democrat's immersion in the vile slough of politics is whether he supports Senator Kefauver, or picks some other candidate, presumably one selected by the "Democratic bosses."
Aside from the fact that I found your statements concerning the alleged reasons for "Democratic politicians" alleged opposition to Senator Kefauver to be wholly untrue, your editorial disturbed me on a more fundamental plane. Like so many voices heard today, the Daily Kansan editorial page seems to cry out that all politicians are per se evil men.
The word "politician" appeared in each of your other Feb. 5 editorials, and in one student comment: "Ickes was . a refreshing change from the ordinary politician;" "... we need diplomats and not politicians;" "Di-Salle admits he is a politician." Only in the last instance where you paraphrase DiSalle's comments is the word used in a sense which can even be called polite.
This, I know, is only a reflection of the times. But a student newspaper has a duty to be more than reflection of the times. . it should be the chief trumpeter for a better time. It seems almost plattitudinous to say that our generation will need to have the very best of its men take an active interest in politics. Yet, unless the evil odor which you are helping attach to the word "politician" is removed, many of our best will be frightened away.
There are politicians—many more of them than you might believe, who are not self-seeking. They practice politics because they know that the chief enemy of good government is public inertia. They are politicians because they aren't too lazy or indifferent to work or fight for what they believe will benefit our government, and because as you paraphrase Mr. DiSalle, they are "proud to serve (their) country in every way." We need more politicians.
Camilla Klein
National Committeewoman
Young Democrats of Kansas
Editor's Note:
National Committeewoman
We agree there is too much confusion over terminology, but insist that part of the blame for that confusion rests squarely on the, shall we say, active members of political parties themselves. A "machine boss" may run the opposition party, but a "political leader" leads one's own organization.
Editor's Note:
The Daily Kansan fervently hopes for "better" times, and is not particularly concerned about whether Republicans or Democrats are the ones who will make those times possible. But if being "the chief trumpeter for a better time" means blind acceptance of the dogma of this or that party then the Daily Kansan will not trumpet.
"Chiselers" who received wages in employment at the same time they were claiming benefits, paid back the Missouri division of employment security to the tune of $30,255.55. It just proves again you can't have your cake and eat it too.
ICE
"The cafeteria is all right if you like frozen food."
Gov. Kohler Could Help Truman Oust McCarthy
President Truman, in his recent speech dedicated to the new Washington headquarters of the American Legion, denounced "McCarthyism" as a "smear technique trying to create fear and suspicion among us by use of slander, unproved accusations and just plain lies."
Manifestly, the presidents wants to spike "McCarthyism," which he believes, is maliciously intended to rock the Democratic administration by giving rise to the people's distrust in the government.
On Oct. 24 last year, the President discussed with Jerome Fox, Wisconsin Democratic chairman, possible strategy to defeat McCarthy in the senatorial election next November. At the meeting, Fox indicated the best chance of eliminating McCarthy from the Senate would be in the candidacy of Gov. Walter J. Kohler of Wisconsin in the Republican primary.
Is Governor Kohler powerful enough to defeat McCarthy? More fundamentally, will he run against his Republican colleague?
Kohler has expressed aversion to the way McCarthy has denounced the Truman administration. At the 43rd annual governor's conference at Gatlinburg, Tenn., Sept. 3 he stated that he "could not condone irresponsible attacks on anyone." However, he never has criticized McCarthy by name.
The governor himself does not seem to know yet if he will bid for senator. Last September Kohler said he wouldn't commit himself for three or four months. On Nov. 16 he denied that he had decided not to run, but added he had not yet made up his mind.
Whatever his attitude toward "McCarthyism" may be, it is obvious that high possibility of his re-election as governor if he should run largely accounts for his indecisiveness.
Republican leaders in Wisconsin are in favor of the policy of "McCarthy for senator and Kohler for governor." Some observers think resentment against "McCarthyism" is not so powerful in the Midwest as in other parts of the country, and therefore McCarthy is virtually assured of re-election unless an opposition movement strong enough to deprive him of his nomination should develop before the primary.
At the Gatlinburg conference, Kohler repeated his statement of the preceding week that he admired General Eisenhower "because of his great sense of duty" and said the general "might feel it his duty to seek the office of president." His subsequent praise of the general intimates his whole-hearted support of Eisenhower if the general decides to run.
Kohler knows McCarthy will never be beaten by a Democratic nominee in the November election and therefore knows that Truman supports him in the primary as a possible means to oust his arch-foe.
Whatever the result may be, the McCarthy-Kohler primary, if it should materialize, is significant in that it means the final battle between "McCarthyism" and "Trumanism." —Yujiro Maeda.
News From Other Campuses
Hanover Wins Trophy Again California Dims 'Searchlight'
The Hanover college Interfraternity Council has been awarded the class "B" trophy of the national interfraternity conference. The award makes Hanover the first school ever to receive the regional trophy two times consecutively. Hanover won it last year in addition to winning the national trophy.
The University of California store committee last week passed a resolution prohibiting the sale of the magazine News in the student book-store. Published in Moscow, the magazine calls itself a "fortnightly searchlight on world events." The resolution now goes to the executive committee for approval.
Page 3
PRAIRIE 500
DESIGNS PETROLEUM COMPUTER—A flash vaporization instrument for computing petroleum refining problems is being constructed by Dale Rummer, instructor in electrical engineering. Rummer (left) and Robert Smith, engineering senior, are shown looking over the device. The instrument rapidly computes problems that normally would take days to work out—Kansan photo by Al Marshall.
Electrical Engineers To Use TV Receiver For Classes
Electrical engineering classes in television and electronics have been given a complete television receiver by the Magnavox corporation. Dr. Donald Wilson, chairman of the department of electrical engineering, said this equipment will be used in lecture and laboratory classes.
Bv JERRY RENNER
"In lecture classes the television set will be used to observe the picture signal as it passes through the various parts of the set," he said. "Students will be shown exactly what each part of the screen does, by taking the man sitting in his living room at home a full picture of a baseball game miles away."
In the laboratory, the set will be used by senior students for measurement of voltages and study of scope patterns.
"The set is worth about $250 to $300." Dr. Wilson said. Throughout the building there are many valuable electronic machines. The total cost of all the equipment runs into
Students are able to check out components and build up their own circuits. One such circuit might be require various voltages in a radio set.
astronomical figures. There are analysts, radio frequency generators, oscilloscopes, voltmeters and ammeters by the dozens.
The department of electrical engineering has built several large electronic machines. E. B. Phillips, professor of electrical engineering, designed the Phillips network analyzer which computes, by electrical analogy, problems which would require days of paper calculation.
University Daily Kansan
Going To EUROPE
Downs has a complete selection of student, college credit, standard and semiindependent travel plans to Europe via ship or air.
Time is getting late to make your travel arrangements. It is urgent that you make your definite reservations now for choice accommodations aboard tour plans still available.
"Companies are permitted to bring their problems to the department and Professor Phillips aids in using the machine," Dr. Wilson said.
This Summer?
However, time is getting late! See Downs today to discuss your travel plans.
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"Using these computers we will allow a commercial company, say a power company for example, to bring its problem to the University and find out exactly how a transistor can be built. Then the generator several hundred miles away doubles its output," Dr. Wilson said.
Mrs. Lois Odaffer Mr. Joe Brown
"The problem can be solved by extensive paper work, but by the use of the Phillips network analyzer or the flash vaporization computer for petroleum questions, problems can be solved quickly and accurately." he added.
The department also has smaller projects in its research laboratories. For example, Robert Lindsay, instructor in the department, is building electronic equipment for the psychology department.
Mr. Rummer began to design the computer in the fall of '49. He started the actual building in the fall of '50. The computer completed by the end of the semester.
This ultimately means better gasoline and oils for all types of petroleum consuming machines.
Dr. Wilson explained that it is possible to solve many aeronautical, chemical and petroleum problems by converting them to electrical problems and building electronic equipment to compute the problem.
In Mr. Rummer's words, the purpose of the computer, which has an external appearance similar to the analyzer, is "to solve for the liquid fraction of each component of a multicomponent hydro-carbon mix-under a given temperature and temperature"—which simply means that scientists are interested in the richness of the mixture of the crude oil.
The analyzer stands higher than a man's head, is about 8 feet long and covered with numerous dials and meters.
Two Faculty Members Visit Greenwood Schools
"There is a great demand for electrical engineers," Dr. Wilson said. "At the moment there are four or five job opportunities for each of the 28 June and August graduates."
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He said there were no girls among the 124 students enrolled in electrical engineering. "It is a good field for women," he said. "The communi-
Donald K. Alderson, assistant dean of men', and Charles J. Baer, assistant dean of the School of Engineering visited Greenwood high school and attended a college night program at Eureka Wednesday.
In addition to this, the petroleum
engineering department asked Dale Rummer, instructor in electrical engineering, to design and build the flash vaporization computer.
The two men talked with high school principals and students in Kincaide, Moran, Elsmore and La Harpe.
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Friday, February 8, 1952
Talk Of Month' Spreads Fame
The "Talk of the Month" club, a project created by members of University Extension, has brought entertaining and well-informed "world citizens" into the smaller communities of Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.
1111 Mass.
Twenty-five chapters of the club have developed since its organization in 1935-36 by Guy V. Keeler, director of the department of lectures and concert artists, University Extension, and Harry Stroud, field representative for the "Talk of the Month" club.
The club meets once a month in a dinner meeting. After dinner, the speaker talks on a subject pertaining to his field, and previously agreed upon by the officers. At the end of each session, at the period of questions, answers, additional information, and discussion by all members assembled.
Membership is accepted only by couples, no individual memberships are issued. Therefore, further discussion may be shared by good friends, husband and wife, and mother and daughter.
Every month the same speaker visits each of the twenty-five chapters of the "Talk of the Month" club.
and Anne Guthrie, an observer and dogru, noted Turkish journalist, student of the United Nations.
The "Talk of the Hall" series for 1951-52 included Hans Olav, Norway's assistant secretary of state on public affairs; Commander Finn Ronne, world famous Norwegian explorer; Cecil G. Tilton, who spent five years with the military government in Japan; Cuneyd Dos-
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 8, 1952
KU Track Squad Faces Fast Team
Three vigorous personal duels in short races will mark the first indoor Kansas-Kansas State track meet since 1946, Saturday night when the two teams open the 1952 season in the Wildcat's new clay layout in the spacious Purple fieldhouse.
These two man vendettas will stretch through four races, involving both flights of hurdles, the half-mile, and the quarter.
The hurdles will match Jayhawkier captain Bob DeVinney against Wildcat football halfback Hi Faibund in the 80-yard lows and highs. Off the basis of his early time trials at .071 and .075 respectively, DeVinny, the fierce competitor from Anderson, Ind., will be hard for any conference competitor to beat.
Faubion was limited to brief appearances last year by a knee operation, but is expected to come into his own this season. DeVinney missed the indoor trials last year because of an appendectomy but came along rapidly outdoors, placing second to teammate Jack Greenwood in the 220-lows and trailing only Cornell's Charles Moore in the 400-meter intermediates in the National AAU affair in June. He is poised for his finest season in a three year Jayhawker career.
The half will match another Cat gridder, Dick Towers, and Art Dallzean, leellight Jayhawk sophomore. The veteran, who placed third indoors and four outdoors last year, will be slightly favored. Towers was nipped in the last 10 yards by Nebraska's Hobe Jones and Don Crabtree of Oklahoma on the boards last year after leading most of the way, in a sparkling 1:56.4 race.
Dalzell has unwound 1.574 in time trials. He is a former Class B state
Cage Scores
Tulaa 46, Oklahoma A&M 33.
DePaul 66, Manhattan 65
N. Y. University 95, Syracuse 78
Holy Cross 85, Columbia 80
St. Francis (Pa.) 85, Georgetown
Leighh 62, Ursinsun 51
Slo Bonaventure 74 Murray (Ky.) 63
Bethavny 55, Thiel 46
Duke 68, William and Mary 62
Furman 59, So. Carolina 56
Loyola (La) 73, Louisiana Col. 48
Memphis St. 89, Union (Tenn.) 55
Miami (Fla.) 87, Fla. Southern 41.
Virginia 77, Roanoke 68
Charleston (Ill.) 103, Ill. St. Norm. 84
Wichita 63, Creighton 62
Indiana St. 81, Evansville 53
Calvin 68, Kalamazoo 62
W. Mich. 89, Kent State 73
Lawrence Tech 110, Alma 80
Marquette 57, Notre Dame 50
Colorado Ski Party Feb. 22-23
Join the party for a weekend of ski fun at Winter Park in Colorado. It's cheap! It's for beginners! All equipment furnished plus lodging, two meals, ski lesson and Union Pacific streamliner transportation. Only $58. Reservations needed by
Reservations needed by Feb. 12th.
See Downs for full details.
Phone 3661
Open Evenings
Mrs. Lois Odaffer
Mr. Joe Brown
downs
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prep champion from Spring Hill, still holding the record of 1:59.9 which he established two years ago. Furthermore he held up in Fall Two-Mile, placing third in the conference derby here in November in 9:33.0 excellent time for a natural half-miler.
Tightest of the three should be the 440 which will bring together State's Thane Baker, a two-time outdoor sprint king last year as a mere sophomore, and KU's grim Don Smith, who came within an eyelash of upsetting OU's Jerry Meader in the outdoor quarter.
Both caused a heavy stir as sophomores. Baker beat such notables as Randy Vanet and Charles Coleman to finish second in the indoor quarter last year behind Meader in a race that went in :50.3. He flashed the 100 in :49.8 and the 220 in the record-tying figure of :21.3 in the outdoor.
Smith lost to Meader in the last few strides at Columbia but ran a brilliant :48.1 nevertheless. He set a new school record of :49.0 in the KU-KS outdoor dual last spring. Thrown against Baker in the anchor leg of the mile relay in the conference meet he held a four-yard advantage to the tape.
Women To Play In Sports Event
Twelve of the University's top women volleyball players will journey to Baldwin tomorrow to participate in a four-college sports day.
At 10:15 the Kansas volleyball team will meet Ottawa university, at 11:15 they will play the Baker university team, and at 1:30 they play Washburn.
Miss Ruth Hoover, director of women's intramurals will accompany the team, and Virginia Brooks, education sophomore will serve as official scorer.
Women making the trip are Sue Neff, Mary Seaman, Ernestine Dehlinger, Mary Snead, Nancy Hutton, Mary Ann Mahoney, Mary Demerritt, Betty van der Smissen, Sydney Ashton, Joyce Jones, Pat Schrader and Chloe Warner.
No Expression In School Spirit
"KU has school spirit, but it is often expressed in a manner less showy than the 'rah! rahl' technique," said one girl at the campus affairs committee meeting last night. Her statement was typical of opinions expressed in the discussion concerning school spirit.
Sitting informally in the plush, relaxed atmosphere of room 222 Strong hall, 26 students and faculty members tried to find what each person's ideas were concerning KU and it's school spirit.
It was generally agreed that expression of school spirit by KU students stacks up pretty well with most schools, yet it is not all that it could be. The most concrete remedy suggested was re-emphasis of some of the KU traditions. Singing the alma mater song after games and more use of the "rock chalk" vell were specific suggestions.
Some opinions, as to why school spirit is not demonstrated in public as much as it should be were:
"The Campus lacks a feeling of unity."
"There is a feeling of friendliness on the campus but no fellowship."
"The so-called professionalism in college sports detracts from school spirit."
"Cheering is over-organized and should be more spontaneous."
The campus affairs committee is a group without power. It serves as a vent for ideas and a sounding board for campus opinion. The results of the meetings can be only in the form of suggestions to be relayed to campus leaders concerned
Kentucky Wildcats Setting Point Record
New York — (U.P.) — Kentucky's rampaging Wildcats have a new national scoring record in their grasp in the college home stretch of the college basketball season.
Official NCAA statistics showed today that, including games of Feb. 2, the Wildcats were scoring points at the rate of 83.5 per game—which would eclipse the season - long record of 82.5 points per game set by the 1947 Rhode Island State team.
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with the problem discussed.
Last night's discussion raised the question of a lack of fellowship among students. This will be the topic when the group meets again,
Feb. 20.
All meetings are open and anyone interested in campus affairs is urged to attend and join in the discussions.
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University Doily Kanson
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
1
By JACKIE JONES Daily Kansan Sports Editor
In this column Wednesday, I took the liberty of expressing some opinions about what I felt was wrong with the KU "spirit" in regard to athletic contests.
Some of my conclusions at that time stated that the cheerleaders were partially the cause, and that they were not doing a very good job of leading yells or encouraging enthusiasm among the students
Since that time I have been subjected to some very violent statements of opinion both pro and con on the issue. Little of this has been constructive toward improving the interest of the students, but Judy Buckley, head cheerleader, came up with some ideas that the student body might well heed.
Speaking for the cheerleaders, she said, "We don't consider ourselves entirely at fault; to make our games a success we need the support of the entire student body, which at this time we do not have."
She said that many of the students feel awkward when they are the only people cheering, and if the basketball games are going to successful, then everyone must take part in the yells and not just a few who are unafraid.
I said that I noticed very little organized cheering, but Miss Buckley said that "We cheer at time outs, quarters, at the half, and before the game starts."
This makes a great deal of sense; no one wants to cheer if everyone around him is just sitting and acting bored.
The cheerleaders are only human, and they also need the support of the student body. No one can expect them to go all-out with enthusiasm when the rest of the students are not willing to take their part.
The cheerleaders are also at a disadvantage in the fact that four of their members have had to leave. Tom Payne, former head cheerleader was called into the Navy, Al Gorsky left school because of illness at home, Sydney Ashton is practice teaching and Max Whitson suffered a back injury.
It is not easy to train new students to take their places and the cheerleaders do work hard. Even if they are not perfect, they could also say the same for us.
The responsibility lies with the student body, and until we become interested in our teams we will continue to let them down.
Rob Kenny Ranked Tenth In Scoring
With a seventeen point total in the basketball game against Colorado Monday, Bob Kenney moved into the ranks of the ten highest scorers in Kansas cage history.
Kenney, a fast, hard-driving senior from Winfield, displaced Ray Evans at the No. 10 spot in the Jawhawk scoring ladder.
Kenney has totaled 522 points in sixty-six games, surpassing the 513 Evans tallied in eighty games. He has scored 243 points in seventeen games this season for a 14-3 average.
He needs only nine points in the game. He needs to climb to seventh at Ames Monday to climb to seventh
place on the list, past two of the brightest stars of past years, Fred Pralle and Howard Engleman.
If Kenney maintains his average in the seven games remaining he can take over sixth spot on the rankings.
Clyde Lovelle heads the all time scoring record with 1.538 points, well ahead of Charlie Black, who wound up his collegiate career in the 1947 season with 1,082.
Otto Schnelbacher is third with 923, Ray Eibling is fourth with 691. Claude Houchin fifth with 658 and Jerry Waugh seventh with 570.
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The Kansas swimming team left this morning for Lincoln, Neb., where they will participate in two tri-school meets today and Saturday.
KU Swimmers Enter Tri-Meet At Nebraska
Sammy Perkins and. Dick Efin were elected co-captains for the teams, which will meet Colorado and Nebraska today, and Colorado A&M and Nebraska Saturday.
824 Vermont
Coach Walt Mikols will present a promising young club which upset Nebraska in their first clash Jan. 12, but Kansas will be without the services of a fine breaststroker, Tom Payne, who was called to Naval cadet training at the close of the fall semester.
One of the most promising of the Jayhawk swimmers is Dick Efin. The Wichita sophomore recorded a 59.6 in winning the 100-yard free
Ex-Student Killed In Korea
News has been received of the death of Lt. Ralph E. Jacobs, who was a student at the University in 1946. Lt. Jacobs had been reported missing since his plane crashed behind the lines in Korea on Jan. 23. Lt. Jacobs leaves a wife and one son at his home in Kansas City, Mo.
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Friday, February 8, 1952
style in the first meeting with Nebraska.
He also won the 120-yard individual medley and anchored the Jayhawks winning a 400-yard free style relay foursome.
Swimmers making the trip are:
Free style: Sammy Perkins, Dick
Effin, Mahlon Ball, John Ashley, John Bunten, Kenneth Reid, John Brown and Bill Payne.
Backstroke: John Welsh and Dean Glaseo.
Breaststroke: Charles Orthwein.
Diving: Bob Welborn, Arch Unruh and Dallas Chestnut.
Vacation time Enjoy Europe in '52
SAIL ON THE QUEEN MARY TO —
SAIL ON THE QUEEN M This is the third COLLEGE OF EMPORIA TOUR. It is the finest, personally escorted, All-Expense educational tour available priced from Kansas City at only $1395.
The tour will leave Kansas City on June 9 and return there on August 17. The amazingly low price covers all transportation, hotels, meals and tips from Kansas City and return. For those who desire college credit, tuition is included.
ENGLAND
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For Complete Details Write Dr. Harold McCleave, Dean The College of Emporia, Emporia, Ks.
Ten Week itinerary
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KU students call Miss Delores Decker, Chi Omega House
What?
YOU=
Buy Your Class Texts NOW.
Where?
At The Student Union Bookstore.
Why?
The Student Union Book Store Will Be Moving To New Quarters Soon,and Will Be Sending All Remaining Stock Back To Publishers.
STUDENT Union Book Store
7
Friday, February 8.
1952
European Trip Is Within Reach Of Even College Students Now
By CHUCK ZUEGNER
University Daily Kansan
Prospective European tourists are getting a big boost from the economy-minded trans-Atlantic airlines. Students now may make a two week junt to the Continent at a price not considered possible a few years ago. ◁
Recent reduction in air-coach rates put a European vacation within the reach of nearly all Americans, and, it is hoped, will foster good will and understanding between Joe Doakes on Main street and his continental counterpart.
Flying tourists have a choice of all-inclusive two-week tours which offer meals, lodging and sightseeing for $618, or they can treat themselves to an off-season junket from New York to London for $417, financing their own extras.
A student who plans to round out his education by a summer trip to Europe can start off in the heart of London, minutes after he disembarks from his mechanical flying cabin, then he crosses the Westminster bridge, Big Ben, and all theabulous crevices of the great metropolis.
That the lower fares will see a boom in international travel is already indicated in the 1952 overseas bookings of the Trans World Airlines. Advance reservations are 50 per cent ahead of what they were this time two years ago in anticipation of the record Holy Year.
The new, low-priced fares have been made possible by the conversion of standard airliners into comfortable sky coaches, capable of transporting 60 passengers.
Even with this rush hour traffic, the airlines promise comfortable, efficient service. All ships have been equipped with reclining, foam rubber seats. Other standard airline services are included.
From London he can go to Oxford
Danforth Chapel Service, 8:30 a.m. Sunday, Lutheran service sponsored by Gamma Delta.
Gamma Delta cost supper and recreational meeting, Sunday, 5:30 pm. 17th and Vermont.
Official Bulletin
Kansas University Disciple fellowship, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Myers hall. Rev. R. W. Albert, speaker, What is Man." Cost supper and recreation.
Faculty forum, 12 noon Monday,
Faculty club.
Intramural bridge tournament,
15 p.m. Feb. 12, 13, 14. Recreation
om. Union. Register SUA office
trom. team. Monday noon. Entry
$0 cents.
Students enrolled in Western Civilization who have not yet arranged for an appointment this semester must do so by Monday.
Engineerettes card party, 8 p.m.
monday. 1247 Tennessee.
Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m.
londay, 203 Strong hall.
Lutheran Student association cost
upper 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity
lower 4 p.m. Monday
Cherald church. Mr. D. Smith,
president of the Lawrence Minister-
Alliance, speaker, "Mission at
home."
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on through the Shakespeare country and take a channel crossing to France and its pride, Paris. There would be plenty of time here to visit the Eiffel tower, saunter down the Eiffel Tower, climb Mount Rushmore and Arch of Triumph. On the side, he might practice his freshman French on some unsuspecting native.
Once again aboard the 300 mile an hour skyliner, he would have time enough to sort and file the memorable incidents of the trip—and, probably, plan for next year's sky coach special.
Seven seniors and two juniors in the School of Medicine have been recently initiated into Alpha Omega Alpha, national honorary medical fraternity.
Medical Fraternity Initiates Nine Men
The seniors are John O. Baeka,
Merriam; Robert H. Isaac, Newton
William A. Leo, Kansas City, Kan.;
Donald V. Plattner, Coffeyville;
Wallace P. McKee, Kansas City, Mo.;
Rex C. Stanley, Chanute, and Warren
E. Swartz, St. John.
The two who received the high honor of election during their junior year are Lamont W. Gaston, Lawrence, and William E. Ruth, Solomon. The two chosen last year as juniors are John W. Schmaus, Iola, president of the Alpha Omega Alpha chapter, and Marion Sumner, Independence, secretary-treasurer.
Election to the society is based upon superior scholarship and achievement.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Eaker, Hiawatha, announce the marriage of their daughter, Kathryn Elaine, to Kenneth E. Dougan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer L. Dougan, Lawrence.
Miss Baker Weds Kenneth Dougan
The ceremony was performed at 7 p.m. Jan. 25 at Danforth chapel by the Rev. George C. Fetter.
The bride wore a dress of white brocaded taffeta, with a fingertip length veil. Miss Mary Jean Baker, the bride's sister, was the only attendant. She wore blue taffeta.
Ray Griswold, Lawrence, was best man. Ushers were Harold Bigsby and Robert Beguelin, both of Lawrence. A reception at Watkins hall followed the ceremony.
Mr. and Mrs. Dougan are living at 1300 Tennessee street. Mr. Dougan is an engineering senior, and is working part time for the Burk Awning company.
Mrs. Dougan was a student at the University in the fall, '51, and is now employed as a secretary in the office of the University extension.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Elects Londerholm
Robert Londerholm, business senior, was installed as president of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity Sunday.
Other officers are Phil Loevenguth, vice-president; Douglas Fenity, comptroller; John Crawford, historian; Dean Glasco, secretary; Richard Bucher, senior marshall; Robert Davis, junior marshall; Douglas Kay, guard, and Larry Manweiler, pledge trainer.
Sigma Chi-Theta Dinner
Sigma Chi fraternity entertained Kappa Alpha Theta sorority at a dinner Wednesday night at the Sigma Chi chapter house. The chaperones were Mrs. Kenneth M. Whyte and Mrs. Eugene Alford.
NOW SHOWING
Members of the fraternity, including both students and alumnae, are eligible for the scholarship.
Page 6
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Scholarship Deadline Announced For May
The Theta Sigma Phi, national fraternity for women in journalism, announces the deadline for candidates for its annual scholarship or research grant of $500 will be midnight, May 1.
MORE THRILLING THAN ANY FICTION! SIX MEN ON A RAFT ACROSS THE PACIFIC!
Miss Helen Matheson, Sunday editor of the Wisconsin State Journal and lecturer in journalism at the University of Wisconsin, is chairman of the scholarship committee.
The winner will be announced at the fraternity's 1952 national convention at Columbus, Ohio, June 18 to 21.
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Harper is President OF TKE George Harper, graduate student, was recently elected president of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Albert Armstrong, business junior, was elected treasurer.
Harper Is President Of TKE
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Foster Hall Has New Office
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Virginia Tinker, college senior, recently became president of Foster hall for the spring semester.
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Elected officers include Jappy Rau, vice-president; Marlene Peterson, secretary; Shirley Mickelson, treasurer; Paula McVay, social chairman; Patricia Means, song leader; Jeannine Parkerson, activities chairman; Pat Raines, fire captain, and Donna Davis, AWS representative.
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Friday, February 8, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in advance and the order will be accepted (saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals may be sent to 3-45 p.m. the day before publication.
One Three Five
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TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED: Mondays and Fridays. Kansas City Plaza district or other airport. Leave Lawrence at 4:50 p.m. from Military building; also part-time passengers for weekends. See Kuster, west door Mili building at 4:50 Monday through days. 4-6-8
TRANSPORTATION or share ride from
9, 8 MWF. Phone FP 8918.
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange manned tours or individual itineraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. tf
Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book your cruise this summer. Call Miss Glesamet at National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
BUSINESS SERVICE
BREOPENED for Business; Oread Broom
Shop, 1237. Oread Hours: 8:00 to 5:30
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biologi- reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. J.宿舍, 883 La. Apt. 4, upstairs. P275J.
TYPING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tt
TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing materials. Mrs. Shields, 1295 Ohio. Pt 161.
daily. Good barber service; also agent for Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaning. Charley Coffman and Bernard Borst. 11
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am,
until midnight. **tf**
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sandwiches~for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 119 Mass. **tf**
Make this your HEADQUARTERS for College Outline Series, Schaum's Outlines, and other study aids. Student Union Book Store. 8
STILL NO INCREASE in price on 140
25c at your Student Union Book Store, 5
25c at your Student Union Book Store, 5
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuring fast, reliable performance. Vermont Television. Phone 138. 820 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
INDEX your vocabulary and language books with the new Superior Cloth tabs. A set from A to Z for just 10c. Student Union Book Store. 8
ONE K & E log log Duplex Decitring slide rule in perfect condition. Call 1279.
SMITH-CORONA silent portable typewriter with case; used very little.
Original cost $84.50. Sale price $54.50.
See Dr. Begg, 16. Strength. 8
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
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RCA VICTOR radio-phonograph console.
Good condition. Call or see Howard
Shellhaas, phone 284; 1100 Ind. 12
ROOM FOR BOYS; nicely furnished,
single rooms; convenient to KU and
school; double to share with junior
in School of Business—twin beds.
1303 Vermont.
RENTAL TYPEWRITERS! Both new and used, portable and standard models, and durable. The easy way to better, neater papers. One at the Student Union Book Store.
TRAILERS FOR RENT. two wheel and four wheels. Have some good used trailers for sale; also a 1938 Ford two-door truck. Hatchel Truck rental, 2-41 North 3rd.
ROOM FOR BOYS, vacancy for 2 boys
1122 Miss. F. 512 each a month
1222 Miss. Phone 495.
HALF SLEEPING porch pickup for boy
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14
1949. CHEVROLET convertible, Deluxe radio and heater; clean; low mileage; good rubber. Priced to sell. Call 715 or 4238.
FOR RENT
SPECIAL RATES for students on Time, Life, Fortune, and Newsweek Magazines.
ROOMS, double and single. See at 1312 Ohio. 8
BOARDERS WANTED! Good food, home cooked! Great companionship at the Nu Sigma Nu house. Very informal. Call 366 today for information. 8
JAYHAWKERS. Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk'
FOR SALE
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands can be seen to use a clock radio. See the values at B.F. Goodrich, 929 Mass.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Crystal Cafe. 699 Vt.
pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff includes our dog fun, fin, and feathers. Grants' Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. **tf**
PLEYMOUTH '49 Special Deluxe, excel-
lent service for below dealer price. Phone 26314W.
We take subscription to all magazines.
We offer a rebate too! Student Union
Book Store.
From the Startling Story in READER'S DIGEST!
"I was an AMERICAN SPY"
ALLIED ARTISTS
Fiction starring
ANN GENE
DVORAK • EVANS
Vacancies Open For European Tour
DIETZEN Silderule in room 110 Mus
please see B i
Jones, 307 Marvin, 9-12.
A few vacancies are left for a low cost tour through Europe sponsore by the Austrian government and th Austro-American Society.
Deadline for application is Friday Feb. 15.
HELP WANTED
Further information can be obtained from the Student Union Activities office in the Union.
Plans have been made for the students to camp or stay in youth hostels in order to keep costs as low as possible. Motor-coaches will be provided by the Austrian government.
The tour will be conducted by an Austrian teacher familiar with the countries to be visited, which will include Italy, France, Switzerland Austria, Germany, Belgium, Holland, Denmark Norway and Sweden.
with THOMAS COHEN • DOROTHY DAMRODGE • BILL WALKER
• THE ORIGINAL 'MAGNUS' STORY. Story and Screen Play by
PJus: News - Sports
THE MARKET RESEARCH Department of Procter and Gamble has several travel eling positions open for young women college graduates to conduct consumer research in the United States campus Feb. 15 to interview interesting persons. No selling: ages 21-26; ability in simple arithmetic; driver's license; a expenses paid plus salary; training in marketing; or experience in talking to Miss Weiss may sign at the School of Business office. 15
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University Daily Kansam
KuKu's Elect New Officers
Friday, February 8, 1952
Tom Foster, business senior, was elected secretary of the KuKu club at a meeting Thursday to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of the former secretary.
Appointments to committee chairmanships were made. They are Bob Volyn, education junior, membership; Dean Cole, college senior, Froshawk advisor; Roy Zimmerman, college jungle, pledge trainer, and Bob Longstaff, journalism junior, public relations.
Cultural value, rather than aesthetic, is stressed in the University's new course, History of Oriental Art.
Tentative plans for a Big Seven pop club conclave to be held in Kansas City Feb. 29 and March 1, in conjunction with the Big Seven indoor track meet, were announced at the meeting.
Oriental Course Stresses Culture
The class, which meets from 2 to 4 p.m each Thursday in the Museum of Art, is conducted by Laurence Siekman, who is writing a book on Chinese art as well as being vice-director of the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City.
Beginning with a study of China's prehistoric art the course considers the Paleolithic, Neolithic and other historic periods of Chinese history. Within each period dynasties which influenced the art and culture of Chinese civilization are studied.
To aid in the understanding of names, a short study of names and their pronunciation is made. The course explains that Chinese names are reproduced in Western books by writing their sounds or a more dignified term is transliteration.
Following the study of China, the course considers the art and culture of India and other sections of the Orient.
In addition to lectures, the approximately 35 persons enrolled in the course will take field trips to the Nelson gallery.
The course is designed as a survey course to acquaint students with the general culture and art of the Orient.
ISA Tickets Good Feb. 10-13
ISA TICKET
Independent Students association movie ticket four will be valid at the Granada theater Sunday, Feb. 10 through Wednesday, Feb. 13. ISA members will be admitted for 35 cents and an ISA movie ticket to "The Model and the Marriage Broker."
Page 8
News Roundup
West Coast Commie Trial Produces Ex-Red Witness
Los Angeles, Calif.—(U.P.)—Merchant seaman David Saunders, testifying at the conspiracy trial of 15 California Communists, today gave the second chapter in the story of his rise from waterfront striker to a "Communist functionary."
The balding, 41-year-old master mariner from San Francisco was the government's first witness against the "second string" Communists. They are all charged with plotting to teach and advocate the violent overthrow of the government.
Saunders described one of the defendants, Mrs. Oleta O'Connor Yates, as a "full time, what we call a professional revolutionist."
"Did the party publish any newspapers?" he was asked.
"They took the hammer and sickle off the Western Worker and called it the People's World, if that's what you mean," the seaman replied.
In all, Saunders identified 11 of the 15 defendants as having participated actively in Communist party work on the West coast.
Grain Inquiry Now
Faure Wins Vote
Washington—(U.P.) —The Senate agriculture committee will "let the blame fall where it may" in its investigation of shortages of government-owned grain, acting chairman Clive D. Hoey said today.
Clyde K. Ridley
The North Carolina Democrat
made the statement after President
Truman said Thursday that the
grain was stolen by "those grain
fellows."
Paris—(U.P.)-Premier Edgar Faure won his first vote of confidence today from the French National assembly. It upheld his austerity program to cure France's many economic ills, 292 to 275.
The 43-year-old radical Socialist's program is the most drastic proposed in France since wartime restrictions were eased in 1948.
Washington—(U.P.) - F or m e r Georgia Governor Ellis Arnall, in taking over from Michael V. Di-Salle as price stabilizer, moves into one of the hottest seats on the nation's mobilization team.
Arnall Faces Task
Arnall will take over in the face of two bitter wrangles; the steel industry's wage-price dispute with the CIO united steelworkers and congressional demands to decontrol some prices.
DiSalle and Arnall are as alike as two plum peas in a pod. They're both short, chubby 44-year-old attorneys turned politician. They like to puff big, black cigars and are
Woman's First Duty Is In The Home Civic Leader Says At Workshop
"Life has outlined woman's place from the beginning of time." Miss Carmie Wolf, leader in women's civic clubs in Topeka, told 200 girls attending the Associated Women Students Leadership Workshop last night in Strong auditorium.
Miss Wolf, speaking on "The Place of the Woman in the Community," said not to think of time in "the narrow margin of the present but in the light of the march of centuries."
She quoted examples from the Book of Proverbs and John Ruskin's "Sesame and Lilies" to show that down through the ages woman's first duty has been to make a home for her husband and her second, to help those who need help.
Primitive man found the Light, God, and learned to use gentleness and kindness instead of force, she said. "Today our ideals are in direct conflict with those of Communism, but we are still working toward the kind of world God desires," she added.
Women serve as an inspiration to
Miss Wolf advised the girls to work, travel or do as they wish after college, but not to put off "the devoted young man too long."
Miss Wolf, former head of the Topeka high school English department, said it is a "good idea to plan for a career," adding that while it is "nicest to establish your own home, you don't know where love will take you."
College women must go out and help the community and the church because no one else is as well prepared for leadership, Miss Wolf said. "Leadership belongs in the heart of woman, and as she rises, men rise with her."
pull men to higher standards," she said.
Janine Beecq, Natalie Goutbord,
and Andree Drouart made a 17 day
trip by car with three other KU
exchange students through southern
states to Florida. Gerard Bourez
visited Wisconsin and Canada. They
explained their experiences in
French.
French foreign students discussed Christmas vacation trips in the U. S. and Canada at the Cercle Francais meeting Friday night.
French Students Tell Of Vacations
known for the ability to come up with a fast quip that leaves everyone chuckling.
Tribute To King
London — (U.P.) — British Prime Minister Winston Churchill hailed the late King George VI Thursday night as a man beloved by his people, a prince, ruler, servant and a "model and guide to constitutional sovereigns throughout the world."
Miss Becq recounted the first five days of the Florida trip, from Lawrence to New Orleans, to St. Augustine. Miss Goumbrot then accounted for a tour of Palm Beach, Miami, Key West and St. Petersburg. Miss Drouart explained events occurring on the trip home via Tampa, Atlanta, Chattanooga, Nashville, St. Louis and Kansas City.
In one of his most moving speeches, Britain's old warrior paid tribute to the King, "who walked with death as if death were a companion, an acquaintance whom he recognized and did not fear."
Courses Planned For Map-Makers
The geography department is making plans to institute a series of courses to train cartographers in different phases of map-making.
Bourez told about his trip north with emphasis on his visits in the French-Canadian cities of Montreal and Quebec.
The teaching of cartography, until recently, has been devoted largely to geography. The department hopes soon to be able to train students in the map-making of other fields.
Cartography offers excellent job opportunities with the Army, weather bureau, and many other government agencies.
George F. Jenks, assistant professor of geography, has returned temporarily to the University after having studied cartography in Washington, D.C.
Professor Jenks, who is on a Ford fellowship, is on leave from KU and is becoming familiar with new devices for making maps.
The University is one of the first in the country to formulate plans for a broader cartography training program.
Campus Police Warn Speeders
"Anyone caught driving faster than 20 miles an hour in the housing areas south of the campus will be taken to Police court and charged with speeding," Joseph Skillman, campus police chief, said today.
"Extreme caution is necessary in these areas because of the number of small children playing in the streets," he added. Sunflower road and Sunnyside avenue are two of the streets which will be patrolled regularly, both day and night.
The campus traffic department asks the cooperation of the student body and faculty in keeping these regulations.
Chief Skillman reminded students also that the speed limit all over the campus is 20 miles an hour, or less if it is too dangerous for that speed.
Sasnak Picks New Officers
Vinita Bradshaw, education junior, was elected president of Sasnak, physical education organization, Thursday evening.
Other officers elected were Wesley Santee, education sophomore, vicepresident; Betty Clinger, education junior, secretary, and Kenneth Reid, education junior, treasurer.
Miss Alice Roberts, special assistant in the physical education department of elementary schools in Kansas City, Mo., talked to the group about teaching for one year in an American school in Germany.
Miss Roberts told of her experiences as a physical education teacher in Wiesbaden and showed slides of places she had toured during her visit.
The course of study is very similar to that of American schools, Miss Roberts said, but students are taught many things by going to see them. She described one of the tours the school children took through Luxembourg, Belgium and Holland.
Student Writes Script For 'Flying Carpet' Show
A student-written script will be used on KFKU's popular dramatic show for children, "The Flying Carpet," Monday, Feb. 11.
Jerry Knudson, college sophomore, did the adaptation of Dovrak's opera, "The Devil and Kate," for the show. It will be produced and directed by Mrs. Ruby LeNeva Motta.
Run-Away Vehicle Halted In Flight
Dr. B. T. Eberle, assistant instructor in physiology, averted what might have been "a very serious wreck," Campus Police Chief Joseph G. Skillman said Wednesday.
Dr. Eberle saw a car, parked in front of the Nurses' quarters on Mississippi street, start rolling with no one at the wheel. He ran out and managed to stop the car, blocking the wheels with rocks, before it had done any damage.
There was another instance of the same kind of freak accident this week when a car parked in the area west of the Military Science annex "slipped its moorings" and rolled downhill into a tree. Police Chief Skillman said that cars parked in that area have rolled away from their parking places before, and he cautioned all drivers parking on or near the campus, to set their brakes before leaving their cars.
The United States has developed less than 10 per cent of its potential waterpower resources.
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in what
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Daily Kansan
49th Year, No. 86 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, Feb. 11, 1952
Proposed Gas Strike Would Not Affect KU
The proposed Cities Service gas strike in Wichita would not affect the University, as a 30-day supply of oil is now on hand, according to KU officials.
The University uses gas, but has an alternate oil heating unit which may be put into operation in 30 minutes. Every winter at the request of the Kansas Public Service company the switch is made to for short periods of time. During January, oil was used for 13 days.
The heating system of the University covers all buildings on the campus, and a few of the dormitories. If an emergency were to exist, students living in these dormitories would be moved to other housing.
Jim Wigglesworth, city manager, said that he and other city and county officials have discussed the matter of a possible gas supply cut-off and steps than might be taken since the possibility of the strike became apparent. Feb. 7.
Students living in some of the private homes and a few of the organized houses would probably be affected by the proposed strike.
In Wichita negotiations were resumed between officials of Cities Service gas company and Union rail运输ers in an effort to avert a strike.
Nearly two million consumers in Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas and Nebraska would be affected by the strike.
The Union is seeking a 40-hour
Democracy Today, a one hour freshman - sophomore course designed to serve as a student forum on the problems and prospects of democracy, is open for enrollment until Tuesday morning.
week with the same take home pay now received for a 48-hour week.
The course consists of a lecture by a faculty member or a visiting speaker at the first meeting of the class each week.
Forum Course Enrollment Open
Students must attend the class Tuesday if they intend to take the course.
The second meeting, moderated by Hilden Gibson, professor of political science and human relations, will be for questions and class discussion. The class meets at 2 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Dean Lawson of the College described the course as "a chance for young America to express itself on problems in the world today as they affect democracy."
Dedication Plans Completed For New Journalism Building
The dedication program for the new Journalism building, set for Friday, Feb. 22, has been expanded into three days through Sunday, Feb. 24.
Saturday, Feb. 23 will be Alumni day and open house for the public will be Sunday from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Prof. Elmer F. Beth, chairman of Alumni day, has issued a "we've moved from the 'Shack' to the 'Castle'," invitation to many hundreds of graduates of the William Allen White school and its predecessor the department of journalism.
For Alumni day and the public open house Sunday there will be guides to show and explain the fine facilities for training in photography, editing, writing, advertising copy and layout, and typography. They also will show the modern quarters into which the University Press will move after Commencement.
The "Shack" is KU's second oldest building still standing, built in 1883 as the Chemistry hall. It was the home of journalism teaching for more than four decades.
Alumni day will start with a get-together from 11 a.m. to noon at the Eldridge hotel. Professor Beth promises no long speeches for the luncheon at 12:15 p.m. Then from 2:30 to 5 p.m. there will be open house for alumni in the new building.
The Friday dedication program is as previously announced. Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, will deliver the annual William Allen White memorial address to an all-university convocation. The dedication of the William Allen White Memorial Reading room, a luncheon for guests of honor and Kansas editors, and the annual meeting of the William
The "Castle" is the school's new home, considered by the faculty as the nation's most modern and up-to-date plant for the teaching of information techniques. The building although built in 1899 is of sound construction and has just undergone a $300,000 remodeling. Spring semester classes are being conducted there.
Last Beams To Go In Building Today
A favorite student pastime will come to an end today with the fitting of the last steel beams into the skeleton of the south central portion of the new science building.
For the past week students have watched these heavy beams swing into place carrying two men 50 to 75 feet above the ground. The men had the task of bolting the beam into place before riding back to earth on a cable.
In four days 75 employees of the Builders' Steel, company of Kansas City erected structural steel framework for seven stories in a 73 by 62 foot section of the two and a half million dollar building.
ERWIN D. CANHAM
Most of the structural skeleton is of concrete columns reinforced with steel, but in the south central section where the auditorium and the large lecture rooms will be located, the spans between supports are too long for this type of construction.
Contract for the building of this part was sub-let to the Kansas City company by the B. A. Green Construction company, general contractor.
"The weather certainly gave us a rough deal this summer when we were trying to finish excavation and put the footings down" Green said, "But this winter we've had enough open days that we have almost caught up to the schedule."
Mr. Green said today that the work was "just about on schedule."
Graduating pre-law seniors who may be interested in applying for a scholarship to the New York University School of Law are requested to call at the College office for further information.
NYU Scholarships Open
All students enrolled in the College must make class changes not later than Wednesday.
C. W. C.
Class Change Deadline Set
P
CONSTRUCTION ON THE new science building on the south slope of Mt. Oread is practically on schedule. During the past week workmen of the Builders' Steel company, Kansas City, have been bolting eight ton steel beams into place. In four days 75 workers erected the framework for seven stories in a 73 by 62 foot section. The Kansas City company, under sub-contract to the B. A. Green Construction company, general contractors, is expected to finish its part of the building today.-Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Allen White Foundation board will follow.
The program is as follows:
At 9:20 a.m. Friday, Feb. 22, an address, "Newspapers and the Survival of Free Society," will be given by Erwin D. Canham in Hoch auditorium.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will preside and John P. Harris, president of the William Allen White Foundation of the University, will introduce the speaker.
The dedication program in the William Allen White Memorial reading room of the new journalism building will take place at 11 a.m. followed by guided tours of the building.
Presentations of a portrait of William Allen White, the George Matthew Adams collection of White's first editions, the Albert T.
Orations Due Thursday
Preliminaries for the annual Lorraine Buehler Oratorical contest will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 14, in 105 Green, William A. Conboy, instructor of speech, announced to-day.
Mr. Conboy said entries should be turned in to him or E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, by Wednesday, Feb. 13. Any undergraduate student is eligible and any topic may be used. Speeches should be 8 to 10 minutes long.
He also said that anyone who has any questions or who wants to discuss his oration should feel free to contact either him or Professor Buehler.
Mr. Conboy emphasized that an oratorical contest is "nothing more than a serious contest for good public speaking."
Members of the speech and drama department will judge the preliminaries.
All judges for the finals will be graduate members of Delta Sigma Rho, national debate fraternity.
Finals for the contest will be at 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 21, in Strong auditorium. Six or seven students will go into the finals.
First prize will be a complete set of Encyclopedia Americana. Second prize is $20 and third prize is $10.
Management Institute To Be Held At KU
An industrial management institute for Kansas public relations directors will be held Friday and Saturday, March 14 and 15 at the University. It will be sponsored by the University Extension and the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
From 50 to 75 Kansas public relations directors will take part in one of the first such institutes to be held in the state.
Reid collection of famous cartoons, an old Washington hand press and the William Allen White moments by his son, W. L. White, will be made at this time.
The annual meeting of the board of the Foundation will be held at 3 p.m. at the Faculty club of the University. A reception will follow at 4:30 p.m.
At 1 p.m. there will be a luncheon at the Crystal room of the Eldridge hotel. Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Journal-World, will preside. The address will be given by Rolla Clymer, editor of the El-dorado Times.
A dinner for Mr. and Mrs. Cranham at 6 p.m. at the Eldridge hotel will be sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi, men's and women's professional / journalism fraternities.
From 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 24,
open house will be held at the
journalism building for the general
public.
A get-together for the journalism alumni will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 23, in the Crystal room of the Eldridge hotel. It will precede the luncheon at 12:15. Open house for alumni at the new journalism building will be conducted from 2:30 to 5 p.m.
SUA To Give Valentine Dance
Sweetheart Swing, the annual Valentine dance sponsored by Student Union activities, will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Union lounge.
James Burgoyne, director of Student Union activities, announced the music for the heels and hose affair will be furnished by the Collegians.
This year's Sweetheart Swing will follow the Nebraska game and there will be no admission charge. Due to the excellent co-operation the SUA has received from the students at other activities this year, a small profit has been realized. "The SUA has decided to use this money to show to the students it's appreciation of their support," Burgoyne said.
Dr. D. J. van Lennep, director of the Institute for Clinical and Industrial Psychology of the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, is visiting the department of psychology today through Wednesday.
Another new feature will be the using of the Union lounge for the dance. This is made necessary by the construction projects being carried out in the Union. At present 50 per cent of the building has been rendered temporarily useless. A cool atmosphere was assured by the installation furnishing will be rearranged and appropriate decorations will be used.
Refreshments for the dance will be served in the Hawk's Nest. Intermission entertainment will be offered.
Psychologist To Visit KU
Dr. van Lennep is surveying the major clinical psychology training programs in this country. He has a grant from the Rockefeller foundation for this purpose.
Dr. M. Erik Urtight is director of clinical psychology training at KU. While on the campus Dr. van Lennep will report to KU students and faculty on current research at the Utrecht institute.
His study of American methods of teaching and training already have taken him to Yale, Harvard, Columbia, Illinois and Washington universities (St. Louis) and the Menninger foundation in Topeka. He will study aviation psychology at the Air Force bases at San Antonio, Texas, before going on to the University of California.
2 426
PAGE 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 11, 1952 Letters:
Professors Provide Ready-Made Excuses
The National Education association, tongue in cheek, has compiled a handy list of suggestions on what to say on a number of academic occasions.
Practically all of us have felt at times that we have been horribly persecuted by professors. The fact is, although we rarely admit it, we sometimes bring it on ourselves.
One of the best-known gripers on any campus is the character who knows little or nothing about a course, makes only occasional feeble attempts to learn the stuff, and screams like a panther when he gets the inevitable low grade. This guy doesn't need to read any farther, he already knows all the excuses.
The following list is submitted in the fond hope that it will provide comfort to those among us who haven't mastered the fine art of having an alibi ready for any occasion.
When you are given an objective test; "It doesn't let you express yourself."
When you are given an essay test: "It's so vague. You don't know what's expected."
When you are given minor tests: "Why not have a few big ones?
This keeps you on edge all the time."
When you are given no tests: "It's not fair. How can he possibly judge what we know?"
When you are asked to study a part of the subject by yourself:
"Why, he never even discussed it!"
When the course is in lecture form: "We never get a chance to say anything."
When the course consists of informal lectures and discussion; "He just sits there. Who wants to hear the students? They don't know how to teach the course."
When detailed material is presented: "What's the use? You forget it all after the exam anyway."
When general principles are presented: "What did we learn? We knew all that before we took the course."
White House Would Be 'So Nice To Come Home To'
"You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To." Several prospective candidates for the Missouri senatorial nomination would like to know if President Truman is playing that song on his White House piano.
One of these may be W. Stuart Symington, former air secretary in Truman's cabinet and ex-chief of the RFC. Symington, who calls St. Louis his home, was once president of the Emerson Electrical Manufacturing company there and is said to have influential friends ready to back the "draft Symington" campaign if he decides to run.
The may-be candidate has had seven years experience in top governmental agencies and has come through the mink coat, deep freeze and other scandals untouched. He is respected by his own party members and by the opposition as well. This was proved when President Truman appointed Symington to head the RFC. No protests were raised against the appointment from the ranks of either party. In addition, Symington has the good will of President Truman who accepted his recent resignation from the RFC job "with reluctance."
Symington's government work includes a hitch with the surplus property board and service as assistant secretary of war, secretary of the air force and head of the National Security Resources board. He has consistently and vocally supported the rearmament program placing special emphasis on the importance of a strong air force. He is a graduate of Yale and a veteran of World War I.
Symington has no strong party organization in Missouri to back his candidacy if he decides to run, but he does possess three valuable assets, a good reputation, an understanding of governmental functions and politics, and a name already known to the public.
Jeanne Lambert.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU.376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn, Inland Dalry Press Assn,
Associate Editor, Business Journal of the American Association by the
National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, New York City
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief Jack Zimmermann
Editorial Assistants Anne Svydje Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahm
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman,
Joe Lostellic, Jim Powers
City Editor ... Kline Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newman
Telegraph Editor ... Jerry Renner, Katring Swartz
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Charles Burch
society Editor ... Max Thompson
Assistant Society Editors ... Dianne Stonebraker
sports Editor ... Larena Barlow, Paulynne Patterson
News Advisor ... Jackie Jones
Victoria Bell
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager ... Emory Williams
National Advertising Manager ... Virginia Johnston
Circulation Manager ... Ted Barbera
Classified Advertising Manager ... Elaine Mitchell
Promotion Manager ... Phil Wilcox
Business Advisor ... R. W. Doores
mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Sophomore Insists Yells All Original
Dear Editor:
It is not our intent to answer Michael McNalley's letter concerning sophomore spirit, which appeared in the Feb. 7 Kansan. Most people of the college level took it for what it was worth. We only wish to clarify in the minds of the student body a few points of which Mr. McNalley is either unaware or chooses to make intentionally erroneous assumptions about.
First, let us consider the implied charge that the sophomore class is guilty of plagiarizing a yell of the class of '45. Yours Truly was on the committee that composed the yells that were later submitted to the class for approval. Neither member of the composition committee has ever heard a*yell of the class of '45. The yells of the class of '54 are entirely original, and any similarity between these and any other yells is entirely coincidental.
Second, the sophomore class was not making an attempt to manufacture school spirit or class spirit by its action at the Colorado game, or by the purchase of sophomore hats for sale to its members. Instead, these things were the result of class spirit. However, we think the idea of fostering school spirit is a good one. In fact, it was suggested to us by Chancellor Murphy at a meeting in his office some weeks ago.
There would be no point in further discussion of Mr. McNalley's obviously false assumptions. We feel genuinely sorry for him, and we wish we knew him better. One of two things is obvious. Either Mr. McNalley has a little spirit of some quality, or he likes to see his name in the paper.
Clovce Wilev
Acting Vice-President Sophomore class
More 'Spirit' Talk
Dear Editor:
We wish to dispel any fears of Kansan readers who may be misled into actually believing that the young, reactionary collegiate, Miller and company, are actually "representative" of KU sophomores. On the contrary, we consider such a premise an insult to the intelligence of many individuals.
If those who are running so madly off the deep end would stop their asinine capers long enough to question the purposes of school spirit, perhaps they would be able to discontinue their prolonged child-hoods.
The amount of school spirit rampant seems to be inversely proportional to the number of rational persons enrolled. School spirit at KU is falling, they say. Hallelujah! Let'er fall!
Sophomores:
Melvin R. Cox
Dick Cummings
Dennis Henderson
Wayne Knowles
David Urie
Kenneth Timmerman
Comments
The state legislature in Michigan has decided the Michigan State football team is the number one team in the country. Coach Biggie Munn was voted "most outstanding coach."
REGISTRAR
Kiigler
The decision was unanimous.
"That's strange, Miss Witherspoon. He's the sixth one today to enroll in your cooking class."
Recent Rioting In Tunisia Poses Problems For French
Arab nationalism, smoldering 50 of the 71 years the French have controlled Tunisia, burst into open flame Dec. 18 with the arrest of Habab Bentali Bourguiba, leader of the Neo Destour (New Constitution) party.
Bourguiba's arrest touched off a week of rioting throughout Tunisia in which 54 were killed, 500 wounded, several thousand jailed. The riots were not quelled until the French garrison of 13,000 was reinforced by 5,000 crack parachutists, marines and Molle Guards.
Quiet, well-educated Bourguiba has no desire for the French to quit Tunisia, for he appreciates the value of the French protection. Bourguiba, an anti-Communist, realizes the strategic importance of North Africa and Tunisia in the event of war in Europe. He understands the part Tunisia would play if Europe and the Near East were overrun by Russia.
The French government in Paris, realizing the importance of Tunisia, both economically and strategically favor granting Tunisia gradual independence, but does not feel that this is the time. French concessions at this time would do much to relieve the tense situation. But the French are hesitant to make concessions, fearing it would lead to greater demands.
Bourgiba's Neo Destour party wants three major changes in Tunisia. First, they want an all-Tunisian cabinet instead of present seven French and seven Tunisian representatives. At present the power is in the hands of the French Resident general. Second the Neo Destourians want an all-Tunisian legislature elected by a popular vote of the people instead of the present Grand Council with French and Tunisian representatives. Finally, the nationalists want an end to use of French civil servants in Tunisia.
Disorder flared after a long period of negotiations which achieved no answer to the rising nationalism question. The Tunisian natives, like those of Egypt, Morocco, Libya and Algeria, want more land, more food, more liberties and more rights. But most of all, the natives want more home rule.
Since the end of World War II the French have invested over 250 millions of dollars in Tunisia. The French colonists pay 60 per cent of the taxes paid in Tunisia. The colonists, stronger than the home government, maintain they are in Tunisia to stay, for they do not trust Tunisians to protect their interests.
An uneasy peace has been restored by the reinforced French garrison, but the fire is still there. Sniper fire and sabotage still echo throughout the land. Tunisia is negotiating to obtain arms from Egypt.
The current riots are only a warning of a new war of independence. Bourguiba says, "We are waiting."
—Maurice Prather.
News From Other Campuses
Red Cross Lauds Idaho U.
James Dunham, chairman of last fall's blood drive at the University of Idaho, has received congratulations for the driver's success from Richard T. Van Metres, Jr., regional director of the American Red Cross. The letter read: "The idea Mr. Dunham had to challenge other universities to follow Idaho's lead is indeed original and should stimulate heavy giving in other colleges."
May Go From Bottom To Top
College records reveal many instances in which students who received below-average or mediocre grades became outstanding leaders later on in business and the professions, according to Dr. Charles W. Cole, president of Amherst college. Some persons reach their peak performance in secondary school others in college and graduate still others after school, he added.
Monday, Feb. 11, 1952
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University Daily Kansan
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The award of residence hall scholarships to 19 University of Kansas men for the spring semester was announced today by Dr. Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men.
The scholarships—divided among Battenfield, Stephenson, Sterling-Oliver and Jolliffe halls—are worth about $150 for the semester. In these halls the men live cooperatively, sharing work and costs, thus effecting a considerable cash savings for board and room.
The new residence hall scholars were chosen on the basis of grades, participating in school affairs and need.
The new scholars are:
Battenfeld hall: Kermit Dean Hollingworth, pharmacy senior; Lloyd L. Kirk, college freshman; Charles F. Church, business junior; Frank M. Comer, college freshman, and William P. Eastwood, college junior.
PAGE 3
Sterling-Oliver hall: Thomas Foster Jr., business senior, and Fred Chen, college freshman.
Stephenson hall: Joe Lynn Nixon, colleague freshen: Leo Frank, engineering freshman; Jerome Goodman,
college junior; Richard E. Jackson,
college junior; Lloyd A. Thomas,
college junior, and Donald P. Weekley,
education junior.
4 Students Become KFKU Radio Players
Four students were accepted as members of the KFKU Radio Players at a meeting of the organization Wednesday afternoon.
The new members are Leah Ross, college junior; John Herrington, journalism junior; Bruce Wilson, college sophomore, and Winston Deacon, engineering freshman.
Along with George Brooks, graduate student; Sam Sabesta, college junior; and John Eaton, college sophomore who were previously accepted, they will be initiated into the group Friday, Feb. 15.
In other action, the Players discussed plans for touring radio station KMBC in Kansas City this semester.
Jolliffe hall: Rodney D. Gladhart, pharmacy sophomore; Robert A. Huff, education junior; Robert F. Lytle, college junior; Vernon D. Schrag, education freshman; Michael J. Pronko, college sophomore, and Paul Thomas, education junior.
Topeka, Abilene, Haven Take Top Honors In State High School Debate Tournament
Topeka, Abilene and Haven were champions of the three divisional Kansas state high school debate tournament held at the University Friday and Saturday.
Second place winners were Russell, Class AA; Stafford, Class A, and Madison, Class B. Trophies and individual team awards were presented by E. C. Buhler, professor of Biology at the Rector of extension classes, and E. A. McFarland, manager of extension institutes.
Members of the Class A bracket with Abilene and Stafford are Oakley, Osborne, Council Grove and Eureka. Stafford was 1950 and 1951 Class A champion.
The Class B schools held their finals here for the first time in several years. Members of this division other than Haven and Madison are Winchester, Ford, Lehigh, West Mineral, and Roosevelt high of Emoria.
Besides Topeka and Russell, the Class AA schools are Arkansas City, Winfield, Hutchinson and Shawnee Mission. Hutchinson won the Class AA state title in 1950 and 1951.
The 1951-52 debate question for
high schools is the desirability of conscripting all citizens for essential services in time of war.
University Extension conducted the tournament for the Kansas State High School Activities association.
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6.4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 11, 1952
KU Breaks Even In Swimming Meet
By JACKIE JONES
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
The Kansas swimming team came through with two victories and a pair of losses in a meet with Nebraska, Colorado ar. radio A&M at Lincoln Friday and Saturday.
The Jayhawks, under Coach Walt Mikls, did an outstanding job in taking both of the Friday events, but were unable to continue the pace on Saturday and lost both of these contests by narrow margins.
The Kansans turned in their best performance in the 400-yard free style relay, winning in three of the four meets. The team of Mahlon Ball, John Ashley, Dick Eflin and Robert Wellborn turned in a 3:58.5 in this event—good enough to defeat Nebraska twice and Colorado.
Dick Effin, a Wichita sophomore, led the Kansas point parade with five first place victories and four second or third spots. His best performance was in the 100-yard free style where he took three firsts,
Unbeaten Teams Clash Tonight
New York—(U.R)—Duquesne and St. Bonaventure clash tonight in a meeting of the nation's two remaining undefeated major college basketball teams.
The Dukes ruled a slight favorite to preserve their spotless record because the showdown will be staged on their "home" court at Pittsburgh gardens. Coach Eddie Melvin of the Bonnies, who played for Duquesne as a collegian, maintains that "dead" spots on the garden court offer a handicap to visiting teams.
Each team has won 16 straight games. Duquesne will have a height advantage, furnished chiefly by six-foot-seven sophomore center Jim Tucker and six-foot-six forward Dick Ricketts. The methodical Dukes also are ranked one of the nation's best defensive teams.
But the rough-and-ready Bonnies, led by Bobby Sassone, Bill Kenville, and Leo Corkery, are deep in bench strength and are rated the speedier team. St. Bonaventure has beaten each of its opponents by at least nine points.
St. Bonaventure ran its winning streak to 16 by beating Cincinnati, 67-55, Saturday night. Duquesne has been idle since it beat Niagara last Wednesday.
Kentucky, ranked the nation's no.1 team last week by the United Press board of coaches, clinched the Southeastern conference title and an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament by beating Georgia Tech, 93-42, Saturday night. It was Kentucky's 14th straight victory, its 10th in a row in conference play, its 19th in 21 games for the season, and its 107th straight triumph on its home court.
Iowa upset Illinois, T3-68, to gain a tie for the Big Ten conference lead in the only surprise development among conference leaders during the weekend. The Huskies, who are tied for first place with 6-1 records, Illinois plays host to Michigan State tonight while Iowa entertains Michigan.
In other games involving conference leaders, Washington ran its Pacific Coast conference (northern division) record to 10-2 by beating Oregon State, 54-37; Kansas State made it six in a row in the Big Seven by edging Missouri, 55-52; Cornell scored its fifth straight Ivy League triumph by beating Yale, 71-61; Texas took over first place from idle Texas Christian in the Southwest by beating Southern Methodist, 57-49; and Wyoming scored its eighth victory in nine Skyline games by walloping New Mexico, 84-48.
DePaul came from behind in the last five minutes to upset Oklahoma A&M, 53-50, as a Hank Iba-coached team suffered its third strong defeat for the first time; St. Louis trounced Notre Dame, 80-58, and St. John's of Brooklyn ran its record to 17-2 by beating Niagara, 58-55, in other major games.
with a top time of :57.8.
Sammy Perkins, an Olathe junior, took two first in the 220-yard free style, a first against Colorado A&M in the 440-yard free style and second in the same event against Nebraska and Colorado.
John Ashley swam two first and two seconds in the 50-yard free style, two thirds in the 100-yard free style and second place in the 440-yard free style.
Nebraska won the 300-yard medley relay, but Perkins came back with first in the 200-yard free style. Ashley won the 50-yard free style. Arch Unruh took first in the diving and Effin won the 100-yard free style. Dean Glasco took third in the 200-yard backstroke and Charles Orthwein took second in the 200-yard breaststroke.
Colorado fell to the Jayhawks 49 to 44 on Friday as Ashley won the 50-yard free style in :25.8, Eflin took the 150-yard individual medley in 1:48.1 and the 100-yard free style in 6:38. Dallas Chestnut took first in the diving and Ball, Ashley and Eflin took the first three spots in the 440-free style. The winning time in this event was 5:28.1.
Against Nebraska on Saturday the Jayhawks were unable to come through and fell to the Huskers 55 to 38.
The Kansans were able to capture only two first places. The 440-yard free style relay team won in 4.01 and Eflin took first in the 100-yard free style with a 57.8. Ashley and Ball took second and third in the 100-yard trials and Brown won the second and third spots in the 440-yard free style. The Jayhawks also picked up several other second place spots.
The Kansas squad took its only 300-yard medley relay victory in the meet against Colorado A&M Saturday. The Jayhawks lost 48 to 44, but managed to take three first place spots.
Perkins won the 220-yard free style in 2:30. Efkin took the 150-vard individual medley in 1:49.0 and Perkins also won the 440-yard free style in 5:30.
Today Last Chance For Bridge Entries
Entries for the intramural bridge tournament will still be accepted this afternoon at the hostess' desk in the Union.
The tournament is to be held at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in the recreation room of the Union.
Entries should be made by teams of two players each. A team may play two out of three evening or all three evenings. Teams will be scored on their highest percentage for any two evenings.
Trophies are being offered for the first, second and third place teams. Medals will be awarded to the members of the top four teams. Also the winning teams will represent KU at two interscholastic bridge tournaments.
A team of 12 women, representing the University, attended the annual volleyball sports-day held Saturday at Baker university Baldwin, Kan.
The team, composed of the most outstanding women in intramural volleyball competition this past season, defeated Ottawa and Washburn universities, but was upset by Baker,
This event is part of a four-school competition in volleyball, basketball swimming and football held both on the campus of one of the participating colleges.
Kansas Women Win Two Games
The colleges are Baker university, Washburn university, Ottawa university and Kansas.
Miss Ruth Hoover, director of intramurals, accompanied the team, and Virginia Brooks, education sophomore served as official scorer for Kansas.
The women who made the trip were: Ernestine Dehlinger, Sue Neff, Nancy Seaman, Mary Snead, Nancy Hutton, Mary Ann Mahoney, Betty van der Smissen, Mary Demerritt, Sydney Ashton, Joyce Jones, Pat Schrader and Chloe Warner.
Three "Phog" Allen-coached Jayhawker teams had undefeated seasons in the Big Six conference. Kansas won 10 games and lost none to take the conference title in 1936, 1943 and 1946.
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Kansas 'B' Squad Defeated By Kansas State Cage Team
A Kansas "B" team which had gone undefeated in five basket-ball tilts this season suffered its first loss Friday night at the hands of a sky-scraping band of Kansas State Wildcats, 54-48.
Several hundred fans turned out in H auditorium to see the action packed contest. All proceeds of the event were given to the March of Dimes.
The Jayhawks got off to a good start, but had their lead taken away just as the second quarter ended. Roger Craft, a 6-foot, 7-anchor, hit a free throw to give the Wildcats a one-point half time lead.
The Kansas scoring was led by
K-State (54) G. FT. F.
Bergen 3 2 0
Nelson 1 1 2
Childs 1 1 2
Adams 0 5 5
Fisher 1 5 0
Fleener 0 0 0
Jung 1 0 2
Craft 1 10 4
Smith 4 1 5
Wolf 2 0 0
McGhee 1 1 4
Tangeman 1 1 2
Totals 16 22 28
Kansas (48) G. FT. F.
Dye 4 2 4
Bogue 2 1 3
Potopoulos 0 0 0
Poggett 0 0 0
Buller 1 0 4
Alberts 5 0 5
Johnson 1 2 5
Whitney 0 1 1
Wolfe 0 0 0
Kelley 3 4 5
Thompson 1 0 0
Franklin 0 0 1
Smith 1 1 5
Anderson 0 1 1
Totals ... 18 12 34
Totals 18 12 34
Score by Quarters
Kansas ... 15 9 10 14-48
K-State ... 9 16 11 11-54
three players who got ten points each. They were Everett Dye, Jerry Alberts and Allen Kelley.
The scoring honors of the evening went to Craft of the Wildcats, with 12 points on a total of one field goal and ten charity tosses.
The Jayhawks led by 11 points halfway through the second quarter, but the K-Staters began to hit, and before the quarter ended they had taken over a permanent lead.
In the third period, the Wildcats caught fire and scored 15 points while the Jayhawks were limited to one free throw.
With only a few minutes left in the period, the Kansas team, again showed signs of life, slamming in points which whittled the Wildcats' lead to nine points.
The final quarter saw the Jayhawks pick-up the opposition all over the court, and steal numerous passes. They came within four points of catching the Wildcats, but four of the Jays fouled out as there was not quite enough drive left to turn the game into victory.
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PAGE 5
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KU Defeats K-State In Indoor Meet
University Daily Kansan
The Kansas track squad opened the 1952 indoor season in impressive style Saturday night as they turned in a $70^{\frac{1}{3}}$ to $33^{\frac{1}{3}}$ victory over the Kansas State Wideouts.
The Jayhawks won seven firsts and swept three of the twelve events.
It was the first track held in the Wildcats' new field house, which was instituted proper style as eleven records were broken out of the twelve events.
In the shot-put, where Kansas has not been too strong in past season, the Jayhawks swept all three of the top spots. Larry Marsh, Galen Fiss, and others were tops in that order. Marsh heaved the shot for 46 feet. 4 inches.
In the mile, Kansas took both first and second. Wes Santee and Herb Semper, two of the fastest distance men in Kansas track history, came in first and second. Santee's time was 4:17.9, a new record which erased a previous time of 4:27.2 set in 1942.
In the 440-yard dash, Kansas was defeated by Thane Baker of Kentucky to Tom Smith and Bill Hawker of Kansas to John and third, Baker's time was 50.3.
Baker also took first in the 60- yard dash, but Don Hess saved third in this event for the Javhaws.
Veryl Switzer of Kansas State took first in the broad-jump but Kansas captured both second and third. Robert Smith was second and Don Roberts took third. Switzer leaped 20 feet, 14 inch. a new record.
In the 60-yard high hurdles, Bob DeVinney took first and Don Wood- DeVinney his time was 7:7. a new meet record erasing a 7:8 set in 1941.
As usual Herb Semper continued to set new records. In his specialty, the two-mile run, he set a new meet record of 9:26.1. This was far under the previous time of 9:45.5 set in 1940.
Kansas swept the two-mile as
Allen Charges Illegal Recruiting In Conference
Coach F. S. (Phog) Allen has charged that "representatives of a Big Seven school" have visited boys at Kansas City and Lawrence high school in violation of conference rules.
Allen refused to name any school, but said that several of the boys attended the Kansas State-Colorado game.
In a talk to the Topeka Optimist club Friday, Allen said that the visits were made the day that Larry (Moon) Mullins, athletic director at Kansas State, admitted that his school broke the rules concerning the recruiting of some Omaha, Neb. basketball players.
The Big Seven faculty representatives last December adopted a rule prohibiting personal solicitation of athletes off the campus by members of the athletic staff or representatives of the athletic staff of any member school.
On Feb. 1, Mullins issued a statement in which he said that Kansas State had acted in good faith in contacting the Nebraska boys, but he could not justify the fact that they worked out at the Wildcat school before enrollment.
When contacted in Manhattan and told of Allen's statement, Mullins said that it was quite possible that a coach or coaches from Kansas State had visited the parents of Jared McGraw. He visited Kansas City and other towns, but he did not believe that the individual boys had been contacted.
He said that a number of prospective students were guests at the Kansas State-Colorado game, and added "We are going to battle hard for all the good boys in Kansas."
The Missouri game, Feb. 16, will provide our coaches with another opportunity to have many more good boys as our guests," he said.
Norm Bitner and Dick Wilson followed Semper in the second and third spots.
In the high jump, Kansas again took first place. Don Fraizer leaped 6 feet, $1\frac{1}{2}$ inches. Robert Smith of Kansas tied with Tam Machin of Kansas State for third place. The old record was 6 feet, 1 inch.
Kansas also set a new record in the 880-yard run. Art Dallzell came in first and Dave Fisher was second. Third place went to Dick Towers of Kansas State. The time was 1:56, erasing the old record of 2:00.7.
In the 60-yard low hurdles, Corky Taylor of Kansas State took first, but Bob Doinney of Kansas came third. Doinney's time was '69, another new record.
The Kansas mile-relay team of Bob DeVinney, Frank Cindrich, Lloyd Cobeitch and Don Smith, set another new meet record as they were clocked at 3:26.2, removing two seconds from the previous record set in 1942.
The pole vault gave the Jayhawks another well earned victory, Jim Floyd cleared the bar for 13 feet, $2\frac{3}{4}$ inches, setting another new record. The old record was 12 feet, $6!\frac{1}{2}$ inches set in 1940.
The Bureau of Census reports that Kansas had an average of 23.2 inhabitants per square mile in 1950. The figure in 1940 was 21.9 inhabitants per square mile.
A fire which broke out on the University's baseball diamond Saturday afternoon caused some alarm but only slight damage, according to Capt. L. J. King of Lawrence fire station Number 1.
"Then all of a sudden something hits you below the belt. You can't bounce back from that overnight.
Fire Damages Baseball Field
Intramural Roundup
Tonight Robinson Annex Fraternity A 5:00
The fire department dispatched two trucks to the scene when the call came in about 2 p.m., but only one was needed to put out the small blaze. Some grass around the diamond was burned off. Captain King said that a cigarette probably started the fire.
Beta Theta Pi-Sigma Chi
"Now I've got to figure on picking
"What have I trained for?" he asked. "I certainly didn't见force this. I was doing something I was trained for, molded to do, and finally got where I could cut a niche of my own.
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Baseball Man Seeks Job
But Comiskey figured today the job was pulled from under him.
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Comiskey lost his job as vicepresident and secretary of the Chicago White Sox four weeks ago when the board of directors accepted his resignation, offered because he had been unable to negotiate a contract for a club executive's contract plus a wage increase.
Jolliffe-Navv
Chicago — (U,P)— Charles Comisik,
his career player stopped by
front office politics at the age of 28,
was an unhappy youth today, trying
to select an occupation for a new life.
"I've been in and on of town a lot lately, checking on the offers, but I can't say where I've been because it would lead to speculation.
"I've got prospects," he said.
"Plenty of them. In and out of baseball, in and out of Chicago, and I'm going to announce my decision sometime in the next 10 days or two weeks.
"I was born and bred in Chicago, and thought of only one thing all my life, the White Sox. But if my best opportunity for the future is out of Chicago and out of baseball, I'll take it.
something I'm going to do for the next 20 years, or 15 anyway. Maybe I'm lucky this happened while I'm young enough to go into something else.
His ambition once was to play for the White Sox, but that evaporated when he learned he would never be greater than a minor league stand-out. Not too long ago, one of the tests for pitchers was for them to hurl at Comiskev.
"Nothing is close to being announced now, though."
"I remember one guy," he said.
"The first ball he pitched I hit against the left centerfield wall. We shipped him out that night."
Comiskey prepared for his White Sox job as general manager of the Waterloo, Ia., farm team after he finished St. Thomas college, St. Paul, Minn.
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Monday, Feb. 11, 1952
KU To Meet Iowa State InImportantCageClash
The Kansas Jayhawks will take a 5-1 record in Big Seven conference basketball games, to Ames, Iowa, tonight and they should return with another victory under their belts.
Coach F. C. Phog Allen should have his squad in top shape for the basketball season, unless the Jayhawks are let-down they should continue to be victorious.
In their last meeting, the Kansans came out on top 86 to 68 setting a new school scoring record for a Big Seven game. In that game Bob Kenney scored 24 points, and he could possibly do it again.
The Iowa State Cyclones probably will not be at top strength since two of their players are suffering from injuries.
As far as the Iowa State fans are concerned, Clyde Lovellette will be the big attraction. He has averaged 22 points a game against Iowa State and had a high total of 34 in the final game last year. He has also had three of his lowest totals against the Cyclones. The Cyclone defense has stymied him with 17, 15 and 13 points—probably the only team in the nation to hold him below 20 points that often.
The Jayhawks must win this one if they are to stay in the race against the Kansas State Wildcats. The K-Staters are presently riding atop the conference standings with a 6-0 record.
The Kansas line-up should be the usual starting five of Kenney, Lienhard, Lovellette, Kelley and Houghland. The Cyclone line-up will probably be Hess, Stange, Diercks, Long and Luhring.
"We have three major problems which we hope to do something about in spring practice," Head Coach J. V. Sikes said.
Football Practice To Open March 10
Spring football practice will open March 10 and last 20 sessions in advance with the Big Seven Springs, Athletic Director A. Dutch Lonborgd announced Friday.
"Most acute is the loss of the left side of the offensive line, which must be rebuilt. Then we have all four first string ends to replace, plus Dean Wells, a fine defensive back," he said.
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PAGE 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Feb. 11, 1952
Miss Davidson Weds Air Force Lieutenant
Dorothy Louise Davidson, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Davison, lawrence, and Lt. James R. Rich, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hathaway, St. John, were married at 2 p.m. Jan. 26 in Danforth chapel.
The Rev. Dale Turner read the double ring service. The altar decorations were white gladiolus and yellow and white chrysanthemums.
Carolee Eberhart, organist, played the following selections: "Moonlight Sonata" (Beethoven), "At Dawning ang" (Calmum), "Year Thumb" (Thubenthorn) "Through the Years" (Youmans), and "Clair de Lune" (Dedussy).
Miss Eberhart also accompanied Donald MacDaniel, who sang "I Love Thee" (Grieg), and "The Lord's Praise" (Malotte).
The bride wore a ballerina-length gown of white lace over satin with a fitted bodice and lace Eton jacket. Her fingertip-length veil of double-tiered white illusion was held in place by a white lace Juliet cap. She carried Johanna Hill roses and stephanotis.
Jean Anderson, Chanute, was maid of honor; Mrs. Edward Clowers, Cheney, sister of the bridegroom, was bridesmaid, and Doris McConnell, Lawrence, was candle-lighter.
Edward Clowers, Cheney, was best man. The ushers were Samuel Caldwell, Honolulu, Hawaii; John Baxter, Ft. Leavenworth; Albert Soukup, Chicago, Ill., and Harry Van Tulv, Leavenworth.
A reception was held in the Kansas room of the Union. The couple will be at home in San Antonio, Texas, where the bridegroom is attached to the hospital at Lackland Air Force base.
Mr. Rich was graduated from the University in June, 1951. Mrs. Rich attended the University in the fall semester of 1951, and was a college senior.
Mortar Board Alumnae
To Give Annual Luncheon
Mortar Board alumnae will give their annual luncheon for the 15 members of the KU active Mortar Board chapter at 12:15 p.m. Saturday at the Castle Tea room.
If there is any Mortar Board member who has recently moved to Lawrence who would like to attend the luncheon, she may call Mrs. J. Drury, 261R or Mrs. George Tedrick, 2961.
Campus Pinnings
Betty Weber, Alpha Chi Omega,
Topeka, to Neil McNeill, Beta Theta
Pi, Topeka.
Colleen Youuree, Alpha Delta Pi, Caldwell, to Don Balaban, Tau Kappa Epsilon at Kansas State college, Caldwell.
Education Fraternities Plan Valentine Dinner
A Valentine dinner for members and guests of Phi Delta Kappa and Phi Lambda Theta, national honor fraternities for men and women in education, will be held at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Plymouth Congregational church.
This is the first joint meeting in several years, and it is hoped that the dinner will become a traditional Valentine day event.
Dr. and Mrs. Sarvadaman Chowla, visiting mathematics professor and his wife from India, will speak on the occasion in India for men and women.
Faculty sponsors are Miss Ruth Kenney, director of correspondence study, Phi Lambda Theta, and Dr. Oscar M. Haugh, assistant professor of education, Phi Delta Kappa.
Kappa Sigma Dinner-Dance
Kappa Sigma fraternity will hold a dinner-dance from 6:30 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house.
Chaperones will be Mrs. W. S. Shaw from Delta Gamma sorority, Mrs. Frank M. Baird from Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark from Alpha Delta Pi sorority, Mrs J. I. Hollingsworth from Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and Mrs. Edna M. Stewart from Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Four Men Pledge Theta Tau
Theta Tau, engineering fraternity announces the recent pledging of four men.
They are Milton Sills, engineering freshman from Amoret, Mo.; Charles Crowell, engineering senior from Kansas City, Mo.; Marshall Brown, engineering freshman from Topeka, and Larry Brennan, engineering junior from Kansas City, Kan.
French Chinchilla Fur Coats To Become Just Plain 'Rabbit', Says New Federal Law
Sorority Pledges Sophomore
Alpha Chi Omega sorority announces the pledging of Nanette Nelson, college sophomore from St. Joseph, Mo.
Washington — (U,P)— Milady may call it "French chinilla," but the legal name soon will be just plain "rabbit."
The Federal Trade Commission truck the formal death knell for motion writers in the fur coat industry by issuing a list of names which may be legally used to describe furs after Aug. 9.
Gone will be such popular aliases as "French chinchilla" or "electric beaver" for rabbit fur, and all the other fictitious designations which have been used to glamorize furs.
The list, specifying the names of 100 fur-bearing animals, was drawn up by the FTC to comply with a new law designed to keep fur dealers from hiding the true identity of pelts.
A congressional investigation disclosed last spring that the fur industry was skimming many customers—as well as animals—by giving "Foreign animal names and glamorous, fictitious" names to common furs. Rabbit furs, for instance, were being turned out under 30 different names.
The FTC will permit only one fictitious animal to creep into the fur industry's vocabulary, Lamb may be described as "mouton" lamb Although there really isn't any such animal.
Only three types of mink are listed: Plain, Chinese and Japanese. Skunk fur may be labelled as plain or spotted. Fox furs may be described as black, blue, cross, grey, kit, platinum, red, silver or white.
The marriage took place at 4 p.m. Saturday in Danforth chapel, The Rev. Dale E. Turner read the double ring ceremony. Tapers in seven-branched candelabra decorated the altar.
The bride wore a white net gown with a fitted jacket of Chantilly lace, and a Juliet cap of matching lace. She carried a white Bible, with a white orchid and shower ribbon.
The bride's sister, Alye Jane Davis, was maid of honor, and the bridegroom's sister, Mrs. Jay Groom, Denver. Colo., was matron of honor.
Mrs. Karl Abbot, organist, accompanied Mr. Abbott, who sang Because, by d'Hardelot She also played Clair de Lume, by Debussy; Ave Marie, by Schubert; Through the Years, by Youmans; The Lord's Prayer, by Malotte, and Etude in E Flat by Chopin.
Patton To Speak To Women Of Westminster Fellowship
Ernestine Pulliam, cousin of the bride, and George Voss, Lawrence, were candlelighters.
UNIVERSITY PARK TEENAGER
Archie
1. ARCHIE
2. JUDGING
3. VERBOING
4. BETTY
5. RECORDS
Dr. John H. Patton will speak to the Women's guild of the KU Westminster fellowship at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Westminster house. His topic will be "Is the Doctrine of the Trinity a Reasonable Christian Faith?" A discussion period will follow.
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Davis, Birch Tree, Mo., announce the marriage of their daughter, Mary Jo, to Ervin Grant, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Grant. El Dorado.
Dr. Patton recently returned after 16 months as a U.S. Air Force chaplain to become the director of the KU Westminster fellowship. All women are invited to attend the meeting.
Two Pledged By Sigma Kappa
Sigma Kappa announces the pledging of Louise Garvin, business junior from Anthony, and Rose Novotny, college junior from Holyrood.
Mr. Grant was attended by Wayne Eckel, Wichita, as best man. The ushers were Robert Heston, El Dorado, and Richard Wahl, Lincoln.
The bride was graduated from the University in January from the School of Education. Mr. Grant was graduated last June from the School of Law. He was admitted to the Kansas Bar association and is now practicing with the law firm of Grant and Grant in El Dorado.
The couple left for a trip through the South and will be at home Feb. 20 in El Dorado.
*Do YOU KNOW ARCHIE and his GANG?
A reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Colburn, 915 Vermont street, following the ceremony. Cherry Kock, Eudora, presided at the punch bowl and Dorothy Reinhold served the cake. Mrs. Terry Colburn and Mrs. Clyde Lovelle assisted.
Two Pledaed Bv Sigma Kappa
Mary Davis Weds ElDorado Lawyer
Colorado Ski Party Feb. 22-23
They'll keep you howling with laughter with their TEEN-AGE ADVENTURES For HILARIOUS fun, LOVE and HI-JINKS See the latest issue of ARCHIE COMICS MAGAZINE
Join the party for a weekend of ski fun at Winter Park in Colorado. It's cheap! It's for beginners! All equipment furnished plus lodging, two meals, ski lesson and Union Pacific streamliner transportation. Only $58.
America's largest sell comic magazine on sale at all newstands for 10¢ or write -
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ARCHIE COMICS
Reservations needed by Feb. 12th.
241 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK 13. N. Y
Chess Club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday 111 Strong.
FACTS meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 210 Fraser. To fill ASC vacancies. All welcome.
Official Bulletin
Phi Sigma noon meeting, Tuesday, 301 Snow hall, Prof. V. D. Fults, speaker, "Views of Professor and Student Relationships."
Quill club, 4 p.m. Tuesday, Pine Room, Union.
Students enrolled in Western Civilization who have not yet arranged for an appointment this semester must do so today.
See Downs for full details.
Phone 3661
Open Evenings
Mrs. Lois Odaffe
Mr. Joe Browr
downs
travel service
1015% massachusetts st.
lowrence, kansas
Engineereets card party, 8 tonight. 1247 Tennessee.
Mathematical Colloquim, 5 today,
203 Strong hall.
Linnaean club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
417 Snow hall. Dr. N. M. McClung
will show movies.
3 Senior Women Selected As Freshman Dorm Counselors
downs
travel service
1015% massachusetts st,
lawrence, kansas
Emalene Gooch, Lynn Wingett and Helene Steinbuchel, college seniors, will be freshman dormitory counselors during the spring semester, Miss Martha Peterson, acting dean of women, said today.
The three will be replacements for counselors who will be practice teaching. Miss Gooch has been assigned to Hopkins hall, Miss Wingett to Corbin, and Miss Steinbuchel to North College.
Home Ec Club To Finish Stuffed Animal Toys Project
Stuffed animal toys for the Red Cross will be completed by the Home Economics club at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 19 in the clothing lab, Fraser hall, according to Margaret Cool, chairman of the program committee.
The animals were sewn together and stuffed at a previous meeting, but ears and eyes remain to be sewed on them. When completed the toys will go to underprivileged children.
Pep Club Rush Tea To Be Held In Union
A rush tea for women interested in joining Jay Janes, women's pep club. He held from 3:30 to 4:30 m. Wednesday in the Pine room to the Wed.
Two vacancies exist in Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, and one each in Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Omicron Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta and Pi Beta Phi sororities and Locks-lev hall.
Independents at large who are interested in attending the rush tea should leave their names with Blanche Pierson by phoning 2913W before Wednesday, Feb. 15.
Delta Upson Elects Officers;
Senior Re-elected President
Charles Dougherty, engineering senior, recently was re-elected president of Delta Upsilon fraternity.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Pledges
Ngme Sullivan President
Other officers are Bob Kenney, vice-president; Marvin Rausch, Don Porter and Oliver Johnson, senior council members; George McKemey, secretary, and Richard Folck, treasurer.
Other officers are Donald Sight, vice-president; Bob Bell, secretary; Joseph Montaleone, treasurer; Bob Wharton, sergeant-of-arms, and Kenneth Hausler, social chairman.
Wendell Sullivan, college sophmore, recently was elected president of the Sigma Phi Epsilon pledge class.
The Native Daughters of Kansas was organized in Topeka on June 28, 1915 with Mrs. DeWitte C. Nellis as the first president.
Travel Service
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Tel. 30 8th & Mast
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by Betty Barclay
Be among the first to select v cottens at re find " styles in pa and plaids. Si $8.00
Be among the first co-eds to select your spring cottens at Terrill's. You'll find flattering feminine styles in pastels, prints and plaids. Sizes 7-15.
TERRILL'S
---
803 Mass.
195
PAGE 7
Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms; Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in person by mail except for a visit (or to ceat Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business office, Journals and Records, 2345 p.m. the day before publication 3:45 p.m.
**25 words or less** day days days $1.00
... 500 ... 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c $1.00
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange tours or individual itineraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. tff
Ask us about family rates, ski coach,
and round trip.reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
with our concierge in the summer.
Call Miss Glesseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
BUSINESS SERVICE
REOPENED for Business: Oread Bread Shop, 1237 Eldred. Hours: 8:00 to 5:30 for Acme Laundry and Dry Cleanings for Acme Laundry and Dry Cleanings Charley Coffman and Bernard Borst. 11
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop. 732 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. **tf**
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Hoege, 838 Ln. La. 4 upstairs. Ph. 275J1.
TYING—Theses, term papers, matchbooks, letters, etc. Prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Hall. 1344W. 506 West Sixth. tf
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chill, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. tt
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1098 Mass.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment, an area thus assuring fast, efficient service. Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
BOOK-EESE IS THE collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, anyway. Place the pages thirteen in place. Now just 98c at your Student Union Book Store.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store, including everything our one-stop pet shop has for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. **tf**
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mals, home-made pies and customer air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Crystal Café. 609 Vt.
TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES! All top grade bond paper, onion skin, and carbon papers to make your typing easier. Student Union Book Store. 15
FOR SALE
ONE K & E log duplex Duplex Decitrig slue rule in perfect condition. Call 1279,3
NEW SHIPMENT OF POCKET BOOKS
Students bring them over
Student Union Book Store.
SPECIAL STUDENT RATES on Time,
Life, and Newsweek subscriptions. Get
yours now at the Student Union Book
Store.
15
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands listen to music at the clock radio. See them in music at the Goodrich, 929 Mass. B-2-13
RCA VICTOR radio-phonograph console.
Howard Shellas, phone 284; 1100 Ind.
University Daily Kansan
PLYMOUTH '49 Special Deluxe, excel-
cell phone for belo in dealer
price. Phone 26144W.
949 CHEVROLET convertible. Deluxe radio and heater; clean; low mileage; good rubber. Priced to sell. Call 715 or 11
RENT A TYPEWRITER NOW! Choose from our wide selection of portables. Your grades improve when you type your papers. Student Union Book Store.
FOR RENT
WANTED: Girl graduate student to
want to move apartment. Call 13
5. p.m., 390-980.
ROOM FOR BOYS; nicely furnished,
single rooms; convenient to KU and
JUNIOR; double to share with
junior in School of Business—twin beds
1303 Vermont.
LOST
HALF SLEEPING porch vacant for boy
month. Phone 495.
Mississippi. Phone 495.
TRAILERS FOR RENT. two wheel and four wheels. Have some good used trailer rails; also a 1938 Ford two-horse truck. Hatchell Truck Rental trailer 4,214 North 3rd.
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
estate buyers. Buyers. William J. V.
Almén, 3110R.
MISCELLANEOUS
DIETZENE Silderule in room 110 Mar-
boret, 307 Marvin, 9-12. please see B
Jones, 307 Marvin, 9-12.
HELP WANTED
THE MARKET RESEARCH Department of Procter and Gamble has several traveling positions open for young women college graduates to conduct consumer research. The position will be held campus Feb. 15 to interview interested persons. No selling; ages 21-28; ability in simple arithmetic; driver's license; all expenses paid plus salary; training in marketing. The position may be interested in talking to Miss Weiss may sign up the School of Business office. 12
Collegians Entertain Boys In Service
Washington — (U.P.)— Four young men I know stalled their quest for higher learning to entertain the boys in uniform.
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
United Staff Commander
It was an admirable sacrifice. The fellows all are graduate students at George Washington university and possessors of better than average voices.
I first heard them sing at a groundhog gambol sponsored by the Society for Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America.
FORWARD
ON LIBERTY'S TEAM
the birthday theme: "Forward . . . on Liberty's Team."
42ND ANNIVERSARY 1952 BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA
BOY SCOUTS MARK 42ND ANNIVERSARY—President Truman will greet 12 outstanding Boy Scouts in the White House during Boy Scout Week, Feb. 6-12, marking the 42nd anniversary of the Boy Scouts of America. Since 1910, more than 19,000,000 boys and men have been members of the organization. The above poster displays the birthday theme: "Forward on Liberty's Team."
These harbershoppers are an odd but interesting clan. They sat around round tables, before the real entertainment began, and burst into song. A different tone rose from each table—all at the same time and this non-singing character couldn't hear himself slun his soun
The fellow who takes the lead is Steve Andersen, Washington; the top tenor is Richard Hedges of Washington and formerly of Lincoln. Neb.; bartone is John Parker young man named Wade Currier of Syracuse, N.Y., booms it up at bass.
The boys I mentioned call themselves the "Colonials." They started singing together just for fun in 1949 and have been at it ever since.
In 1950 they branched out as a global attraction when the armed services heard about their value as entertainers. The Military Air Transport service agreed to cart them around.
It wasn't long before the team was appearing at various functions around town and attracting considerable attention.
"All you'll get out of it is free air transportation, your grub, and whatever satisfaction you can get from training services," they were told.
That year—in 1950—they flew to Newfoundland, Labrador and Greenland, just in time to catch a
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Monday, Feb. 11, 1952
AmateurRadio Club Considers Technical,Operative Problem
If you are interested in the technical and operative end of radio QST, the amateur radio club, will be glad to help you.
At its monthly meetings, the co discusses radio theory and holds code practice sessions for anyone interested in becoming an operator. Meetings are the first Wednesday in each month.
In addition to learning their own jobs, the members keep up with what other amateurs are doing. They talk to amateurs in all parts of the United States and to amateurs in other parts of the world. "Working DX" is the term referring to foreign contacts.
A radio amateur is one who is licensed to operate a radio station on the air according to government rules. Each station has a number of wave lengths called amateur bands. Persons licensed are allowed to build and operate stations and talk to other amateurs anywhere.
The amateurs build their own radios and have them both in their houses and cars. Richard Shackleford, engineering senior and presiding officer of the air force, he had talked to every state in the United States from his car.
"We would go into a ward and do a couple of our own arrangements," Currier said, "and then we'd separate and talk sports and politics with the kids."
Several Lawrence amateur operated a network of mobile radio stations (cars with two-way radios) to
lot of heavy weather and to entertain a lot of homesick and bedridden boys in hospitals.
“You'd think every one of those boys was from Brooklyn,” Hedges says. “Crabs them they seemed like were 'Crumbs' in My Model T’ and ‘Mood Indigo.’”
In the Model T song one of the boys pulls a bulb full of water from his pocket and to simulate a leaky radiator squirts the water into the air. The first time they tried spraying all four singers, it brought down the house and they left it in the act.
The favorite among the servicemen was Currier's arrangement of "Down on Toidy Toid."
The quartet soon may be broken up. All of the boys are of draft age. It isn't likely they could wind up at the same base.
Eye
YOUR EYES
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should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
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aid in the flood control and relic last summer. Shackelford stated.
The amateur station in the electrical engineering lab on the Hi also was used continuously during the summer months to control and relief "Indirectly he said, 'we saved lives in several cases."
Shackelford said several states including Missouri have issued license plates with call letters on their to radio amateurs. They designate that the car has an amateur radio hookup. The call letters replace the forty-million amateur registered to drivers. The letters are useful to civic officials in locating amateur personnel in time of emergencies.
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PAGE 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 11, 1952
Speaker From Texas
'Knows More Than Anyone About His State's Folklore'
James Frank Dobie, who will speak at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser theater, is recognized as "the man who probably knows more about Texas folklore than any other man alive."
His lecture, "Tales of the Southwest," will be free and the public is invited to attend.
Mr. Dobie is a native Texan. He managed a quarter-million-acre ranch in 1920-21. It was then that he began to collect and retell legends and folk tales of Texas which
Education Lists 46 With Honors
Forty-six members of the School of Education are on the honor roll for the fall semester, four having an A average. The honor roll includes all members of the School of Education with averages 2.43 or above.
Seniors on the honor roll are Mona Lee Benham, Margaret Marie Bevan, Betty Eltha Brown, Beverly Jean Cope, Marianne Crosby, Caroline Ferne Crosier, Celia Ann Cuthbertson, Carol Ann Donovan, Robert R. Dunwell, Franklin Gregory Fisk, Gordon Irvin Gaston, Carl E. John Gerriets, Margaret Eleanor Gavans
The four students who made a straight A average are Mary Ann Cook, Mrs. Beeson, and Marnie Wagner, juniors, and Marilyn Colby Smith, senior.
Philip Wendel Hauser, Janice Horn, Darlene Ann Kerbs, Doris Dean Lyons, John Stewart Newlin, Pat Kay Obenland, Margaret Regina Olson, Inez R. Owens, Veda Marian Russell, Patricia Ann Salyer, Mary Elizabeth Selig, Jane Helen Semple, Vera Florence Smoots, Anja Spring, Georgia Sue Swartz, Ada Margaret Watson, Margaretta C White and Rita Yvonne Yakle.
Juniors are Josephine Gay Bonney, Allie Kathryn Grove, Esther Darlene Harms, Karolyn Marie Holm, Iyren I Hutcherson, Marian Louise Miller, Marilyn Gillett More, Sammy Leaton Sebesta and Rosalie Thorne.
One member each from the sophomore and freshman class is on the honor roll. They are Joan Reid Squires and Marlene Moss, respectively.
Interviews
Personnel representatives from the following companies will be at the School of Business and the School of Engineering to interview June and August graduates interested in positions in trade and industry.
Today
School of Business: Today
Haskins and Sells Boeing Airplane company
Tuesday
Public Service company of Denver
Jeffrey Manufacturing company
General Motors corporation
Thursday
Proctor and Gamble company
Mavtag company
Friday
Proctor and Gamble company Eastman Kodak company Firestone tire company School of Engineering:
Today
Alaska Road commission General Motors corporation
Tuesday
General Motors corporation
Micro Switch
Gates Rubber company
company Wednesday
Public Service company of Colorado Eastman Kodak company
Thursday
Eastman Kodak company Proctor and Gamble company Ethyl corporation
he has continued ever since.
Friday
Bendix Aviation corporation Interested persons may sign the interview schedules in the respective school office.
During his colorful career, Mr Dobie has been a member of the U.S National Commission of UNESCO secretarial editor of the Texas Folk-love society for 20 years, lectured to many students, was Visiting and was awarded an honorary degree from Cambridge university in England.
Mr. Dobie was head of the department of English at Oklahoma A&M from 1923-5 and later became professor of English at the University of Texas.
His search for folklore has led him over many miles of the Southwest and he has written and edited over 20 books on the subject of folklore.
Mr. Dobie is one of the editors of "Coyote Wisdom," which is of interest to science as well as to folklore and its observations about the coyote.
Mr. Dobie, whose home is in Austin, Texas, is now on a tour of the U.S. He spends most of his time writing and lecturing.
Radio Schedule
The week's schedule of programs to be heard on KFKU, University radio station, found at 1250 on the radio dial.
Jayhawk Junior classroom.
Monday
The Flying Carpet... 2:30 p.m.
"The Devil and Kate."
Broadway Rhapsody ... 2:45 p.m.
Old favorites in music from show
Great Symphonies ...7 p.m.
Saint-Saen's third symphony.
Tuesday
Javhawk Junior classroom.
Art by Radio 2:30 p.m.
Lesson in Painting by Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of edu-
ducation
KU Cavalcade of Hits:
Ko Cavalele of this.
Memo Pad ... 7 p.m.
The top tunes of the week on Mt
Oread; a collection of cultural
events in the Kansas City, Law-
rence, and Topeka area.
Wednesday
Javhawk Junior classroom.
Prairie Footprints ... 2.30 p.m.
A program of Kansas history for grade school students. "I insist;
The Flat."
KU in the news ... 2:45 p.m.
Tom Yoe reporting the news
Concert Hall ... 7 p.m.
Featuring Lotte Lehman; Roye
Gorboneva ceelist; Lawrence
Theresa and Wanda Landowska,
harpsichordist.
Thursday
Brainbusters p.m.
Allen Crafton, professor in speech
(master of ceremonies), Emil L.
Telfel, associate professor of
journalism, Max Dresden, associate
professor of physics, Frances
Nelson (wife of Edward G. Nelson,
professor of accounting), and the
Rev, Dale Turner, professor in the
school of religion.
Adventures in Music Land ... 2:30 p.m.
Dramatized story of Chopin; his life and music.
Jayhawk Junior classroom.
Friday
Storybook Train 2:30 pm
"The Man Who Lost His Head."
Orchestra Hamilton at the Concert
Chamber Music... 7 p.m.
Organ Recital 2:45 p.m.
Jerald Hamilton at the Console
Enrollment In AFROTC On Par With Last Semester
Enrollment in the University's Air Force ROTC remains about the same as last semester, it was announced today.
-News Roundup
The unit has approximately 975 cadets. Admission of nearly 60 new cadets made the figure nearly the same, despite drops and graduates.
29 Killed, 42 Hurt In Plane Crash In Third Elizabeth, N.J. Disaster
Elizabeth, N.J.—(U.R.)—Newark airport's third airliner disaster within two months killed 29 persons and injured 42 early today.
that the New York port authority shut down Newark airport at 3 a.m. "in the light of these tragic events and pending further investigation."
The plane smashed into a four-story apartment house in which 60 families were sleeping two minutes after its take-off for Miami. Both building and plane wreckage burst into flames.
It occurred within the same square mile of Elizabeth in which the two other airliners crashed Dec. 16 and Jan. 22, the first just after leaving Newark, the second while attempting an instrument landing. Engine trouble was the indicated cause of the latest disaster.
Fifty-nine passengers, including three babies in arms, and a crew of
Make-Believe War Toll Reaches 9
Camp Drum, N.Y.—(U.P.) A make-believe war at this rugged upstate military reservation became all too real today as Army officials counted nine dead and about 80 injured in "operation snowfall."
Seven men were killed and 25 injured in three separate accidents yesterday. Two paratroopers plummeted to their death in an earlier phase of the maneuvers staged to test operations under arctic conditions.
The plane, on a mission with 32 white-uniformed paratroopers and a crew of four careened 100 feet aircraft into an unoccupied parked airplane.
A twin-engined C-46 transport plane crashed while taking off from Wheeler-Scaks airfield here yesterday. Three were killed instantly and a fourth died in a camp hospital. Eighteen were hurt.
All of the dead were members of the plane's crew.
Some of the injured pulled themselves through the plane's rear door and stumbled to ambulances which rushed them to the camp hospital. All but five of the injured were treated and released.
Maj. Robert Eby said the paratroopers had been ordered to fasten their safety belts, which held them fast when the plane crashed.
"If it hadn't been for strict air discipline, the death toll would have been much higher." Eby said.
The crash did not stop flight operations. Other planes, took off over the wreckage while crews were removing the dead and injured.
Less than three hours after the crash, maneuver officials were told two members of the 11th Airborne division had been killed when a speeding 83-car New York Central Express struck at an open grade crossing near Spragueville, N.Y., about 50 miles north of the camp;
Five soldiers hurt in the train-truck accident were taken to a Gouverneur, N.Y. hospital. Their injuries were not considered serious.
four were on board. Twenty-two passengers, three crewmen, and four residents of the building were killed. Thirty-one passengers and nine residents were in hospitals, some gravely injured.
In addition, five persons were missing and may prove to be dead. Several passengers and the stewardess Nancy Taylor, 22, were hardly injured.
The plane was in trouble practically from the instant its wheels left the runway.
Miss Taylor said: "All of a sudden the engines sputtered and stopped and then we went down." A passenger said he saw the propeller of the far right engine turning in reverse. The pilot Wayne G, Foster, radioed the control tower; "Lost an engine. Coming back."
Other passengers were conscious,
19 Dead, 10 Hurt In Snow Avalanche
Zurich, Switzerland —(U.P.)—Nineteen persons were killed last night when an avalanche, of snow crushed a ski resort in the Austrian Alps, police said today. Ten others were injured.
The avalanche buried the town of Melkoede, Austria, near the Austro-German border. It brought the death of two soldiers and storms, over the weekend, to 28.
Sixteen of the 19 killed when the snow crashed down Hochisen mountain were German ski enthusiasas.
Forecasters predicted no letup in the storms that have plagued the area for eight days.
Traffic and communications were cut off in parts of Switzerland, Italy, Austria Germany and France, and the Swiss mountain villages were evacuated.
Thirty other skiers were trapped in the inn at Melkoe, but moun-
tains of teams saved them. Among the dead, the inniekeeper and his wife and child.
Nine other persons were killed by avalanches in Switzerland and Italy—six yesterday.
News of the disaster at Melkoe came this morning from the nearby town of Mittelberg, which said the little town disappeared under the snow. Communications still were broken with Melkoe.
Trial Continued
Los Angeles — (U.P.) — A balding merchant seaman tells the second chapter today of the "inside story" on west coast Communism at the University of California, willing to teach and advocate the violent overthrow of the government.
David Saunders' testimony on his rise from a waterfront striker to a "communist functionary" was interrupted Last Friday when the ill-tempered Attorney Eric Schullman forced postponement of the trial.
in the seconds before disaster, of the pilot fighting to keep his plane in the air. Some said he got no higher than a few hundred feet and Miss Taylor said it was 1,000 to 1,500 feet. Then, suddenly, the plane "dropped like a shot," as one passenger put it.
The plane wavered on, skimming roof-tops. It barely cleared the roof of an orphanage in which 60 children were sleeping, and smashed into an apartment house.
It seemed to explode into fire with the impact, showering flames over the roof of the building. But only the heavy landing wheels and their gear struck the building, the funiture slid across the roof, flip-flopped and smashed into the muddy play field of the ophage.
5
The flames were licking along the outside of the fuselage, fed from the wing gas tanks. The impact checked them long enough for surviving passengers to save themselves less easily, who were injured too severely by their urgency rushed into the wreckage to aid in the rescue.
Meanwhile, the top floor of the apartment house already was roaring with fire. The occupants of the apartment hit directly were killed.
Foster and his co-pilot, C. E. Sinclair, were among the dead. The flight engineer, I. R. Shea, was among the dead.
The weather had nothing to do with the crash. It was a clear night when Foster gunned his ship down the runway.
Panmunjom, Korea — (U.P.)— The United Nations today challenged Communist China's right to take part in a post-armistice Korean peace conference.
Reds Challenged
Vice Admiral C. Turner Joy, head of the UN truce delegation, asked the Reds how China could claim a seat at the peace conference if she still contended that the only Chinese troops in Korea were "volunteers."
"They could not answer that question." Joy said after the plenary session. "It was the one choice bit of the day."
Joy also told communist negotiators that the UN would refuse to take any further action under the final item on the truce agenda if it was not approved, and proposed Korean peace conference to include other Asian problems.
"It is our view that if the commanders must make inappropriate recommendations . . . Then the UN command will be opposed to any recommendations being made," Joy said.
The final agenda item calls for recommendations to the belligerent government regarding a final peace settlement in Korea. It would be held 90 days after a truce has been signed.
Moreover, he said, the UN does not consider any of the recommendations proposed by the Reds essential to a truce.
Mourning Thousands Pay Homage To King
London—(U.P.)—The body of King George VI was brought back to London today from Sandringham, where he died, and was borne in stately procession to Westminster to lie in state until his funeral Friday.
Queen Elizabeth II and other members of the royal family accompanied the King's body to London in a 10-car funeral train.
Thousands of Londoners, people from all over the kingdom, the commonwealth, and the world huddled under umbrellas at the station and along the route to Westminster hall to pay homage to the King.
Queen Elizabeth, Queen Mother Elizabeth and Princess Margaret, black-veiled, left the train first and drove directly to Westminster.
An officer and 10 men of the King's company of the Royal Grenadier guards took the coffin off the black-teak hearse car of the train and strapped it to a gun carriage drawn by horses of the king's troop of the Royal Horse artillery.
A palace official stepped forward and put on the coffin the jewelled imperial crown.
Grenadier guardens took up the stations on each side of the river, calling in a mission moved off.
Mounted policemen started the procession, ahead of the gun carriage.
Behind the body of the King walked his brother, the Duke of Erin and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and consort of Queen Elizabeth II.
While the procession moved slowly through the streets of London, the Lords and Commons of Parliament assembled in 600-year-old oak-beamed, Westminster hall, oak-queen, Queen Mother, Princess Mary and other members of the royal family and relatives to receive the body.
At the door of the hall waitee the Archbishop of York, second ranking prelate of the Church of England, acting for the ailing Archbishop of Canterbury; the
Lord Chamberlain, and the Duke of Norfolk. the hereditary Earl Marshal of Britain.
They received the body officially, and with the richly arrayed messengers, heralds, and kings-of-arms of the College of Arms accompanied by pennants draped cataleid on which pumice was placed until the burial at Windsor Friday.
In the procession through the long hall, walking by herself, behind her father's body, was Queen Elizabeth II.
Eighty-four-year-old Queen Mary, straight as a ramrod, and Queen Mother Elizabeth came next.
Princess Margaret, her beautiful face drawn, walked with the Duke of Edinburg, the new queen's consort.
The royal family gathered at the head of the coffin when it was placed on the catafalque.
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The Archbishop of York conducted a brief service and then the officers of the crown led the royal family out of the hall.
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Deferment Test To Be Given April 24
College men eligible to take the selective service qualification test and who wish to do so in 1952, should file applications no later than Monday, March 10, for the April 24 administration, selective service national headquarters advise.
To be eligible to apply for the test a student must: intend to request deferment as a student, be satisfactorily pursuing a full-time college course and must not previously have taken a selective service college qualification test.
An application and example of the test questions may be obtained at the registrar's office, 122 Strong, or at any local draft board office.
The tests will be given by the educational testing service of Princeton, N. J., at more than 1,000 different centers throughout the United States and its territories.
The criteria for deferment as a student is either a satisfactory score of at least 70 on the qualification test or satisfactory rank in class
Seniors accepted for admission to a graduate school satisfy the criteria if they stand in the upper half of their classes, or make a score of 75 or better on the test. Students already enrolled in graduate schools may be deferred as long as they remain in good standing.
(upper half of the freshman class, upper two thirds of the sophomore class, upper three fourths of the junior class).
Daily Kansan
These criteria are guides and the local boards are not bound to follow them.
49th Year, No.87
Dorm Counseling Jobs Now Open
Women interested in being freshman dormitory counselors for the 1952-53 school year should obtain applications from the dean of women's office. Miss Martha Peterson, acting dean of women, said today.
Although graduate students, seniors, and juniors receive preference in that order, counselors will be chosen more on the basis of interest, desire to work with freshman women, knowledge of the campus and desire to share that knowledge with newcomers.
Counselors should have a keen desire to help freshman women adjust satisfactorily to the campus, Miss Peterson said.
Applications should be turned into the dean of women's office in the near future, as the counselors will be chosen by April.
Women selected will be assigned one of the freshman dormitories where they will live with their counselees. For her services each counselor will receive her room and board. Her duties other than a two-hour weekly seminar will depend on the dormitory to which she is assigned.
Teachers and supervisors in Lawrence elementary schools visited the children's art exhibit in Strong hall Monday as guests of the School of Education.
Art Teachers See Exhibit
Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, spoke on the background of the exhibit and its benefit to children. Miss Ellsworth was the supervisor of art in Lawrence elementary schools for several years prior to 1950 when she became the head of the department of art education.
Miss Ellsworth and Dr. Thayer Gaston, chairman of the department of music education, will go to Atchison in April to arrange an art and music clinic for elementary schools. This clinic will be the third one they have organized this year, one in Colby and one in Salina preceding.
Miss Lorita Higginbottom, supervisor of art in the local schools, and W. D. Wolfe, supervisor in the local schools, arranged the meeting.
Dr. Amiya Chakravargy, visiting professor of humanities, will open a new series of talks for the Socialist Study club at 8 p.m. Wednesday in 104 Green with a discussion of the foundations of socialism
Chakravarty To Talk To Study Club
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Dr. Chakravarty's talk will be about the basic elements in social- thought and practice. The folic is invited.
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1952
Graduate Student Chosen For Role On Radio Drama
Mrs. Mary Lou Jukes, graduate student in the department of speech and drama, has received an invitation to play in the "Philip Morris Playhouse on Broadway," one of radio's top-flight dramatic shows.
She was asked to be in New York Thursday, Feb. 28, to begin practice for her role on the March 2 program opposite Dane Clark, Hollywood actor. However, the date conflicted with her appearing in the University's third major play production, "The Lady's Not For Burning," which began Wednesday, Feb. 27.
Don Dixon, assistant professor of speech who conducted tryouts for the Playhouse in December, phoned the Philip Morris company in New York, told them the situation, and asked them if they would release Mrs. Jukes from their March 2 program and use her on a later program. The Playhouse replied that it would.
At the December tryouts, Mrs. Jukes made a tape recording of a scene from the Broadway play, "Accent on Youth," and sent it to New York.
"The Philip Morris Playhouse on Broadway" inaugurated the past October a unique career opportunity for college drama students. Each week it selects a talented student actor or actress to appear on the show in a featured role alongside regular Broadway and Hollywood stars.
The student selected receives $250, membership in the American Federation of Radio Artists (radio actors' guild), and all expenses incurred in connection with his appearance on the program.
Chairman Announced For AWS Workshop
Late registrations this semester total 200, Registrar James K. Hitt said today.
A special award program will be held Tuesday, Feb. 19. The best college actor or actress to appear on the first cycle of shows will receive awards of $2,000.
Chairmen for the Associated Women Students leadership workshop now in progress, have been announced by Jerry Hesse, general chairman for the workshop.
KU Enrollment Reaches 6,051
They are Donna Arnold, college sophomore, contact; Pat Roney, journalism junior, publicity; Betty Lu Gard, college freshman, programs; Nancy Landon, college sophomore, personnel; Ann Wagner, education junior, speaking first night; Norma Lou Falletta, college sophomore, second night speaking, and Patty Lloyd, college junior, third night speaking.
Although enrollment is down from the fall semester this drop is no more severe than in other years, Mr. Hitt said.
This figure brings the total enrollment to 6,051 compared with September's enrollment of 6,479.
JANUARY 15, 1948
MRS. MARY LOU JUKES
Rebates Total $15,643.61
A total cash rebate of $15,643.61 has been returned to students by the Student Union bookstore since Jan. 1, L. E. Woolley, director of the Student Union, announced today.
Rebates are offered to students on a basis of profits earned by the bookstore over certain periods of time. This term the bookstore has been able to offer a 15 per cent rebate on all sales. About $21,000 was the amount designated to be returned.
The rebates claimed represent a high per centage for so early in the term. Mr. Woolley said. "Of course, the ideal outcome would be for 100 per cent of students to claim their rebates. Judging from the past five years, however, we can expect to pay back about 85 per cent," he said.
The fourth ISA free movie will be "The Model and the Marriage Broker," with Jeanne Crain. ISA passes will admit Monday through Wednesday.
Almost three hundred dollars was added to the treasury of the Independent Student association through the sale of 445 boxes of Christmas cards, reports Louis Clum, treasurer.
ISA Makes Profit On Card Sales
The annual National ISA convention will be held April 11 to 13, at the University of Oklahoma. All members are invited to attend.
Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks.
Research Grants Close March 15
Faculty members desiring research grants for 1952-53 from the research appropriation should submit requests not later than March 15.
Two other scholarship dormitories, Pearson hall for men and Sellards hall for women, are still under construction and will not be ready for occupancy for some time, Dean Woodruff said.
Stephenson hall is a memorial to the late Lyle Stephenson, Kansas City insurance man, whose widow willed the Endowment association $90,000 to build the hall. An additional $50,000 was raised to finance the $140,000 building.
Stephenson Hall Ready To Occupy
The lecture, sponsored by Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity, and the department of chemistry, honors the late Professor Dains, who taught at KU 39 years prior to his retirement in 1942. He died in 1948.
Chancellor Murphy said the budget committee will follow the same policies and procedures as were established last year.
The Stephenson dining facilities will be ready in about two weeks. Until then the men will continue to eat their meals at Battenfeld and Jolliffe halls, Dean Woodruff said.
The hall was scheduled for occupancy in September. Since that time, its residents have been housed temporarily in Robinson gymnasium annex and other men's scholarship dormitories.
Stephenson hall, newly constructed scholarship dormitory for men, will be ready for occupancy Thursday, Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men, said today.
Although the kitchen and dining facilities in the basement are not completed, 52 men will move into the three top floors. Furniture is being moved into the building.
Illinois Man To Lecture
Dr. Roger Adams, chairman of the chemistry department at the University of Illinois, will deliver the third annual Frank Burnett Dains memorial lecture at 8 p.m. today, in 305 Bailey Chemical laboratories. He will speak on "Quinone Immides."
Dr. Calvin Vanderwerf, acting chairman of the KU chemistry department, said that Dr. Adams is one of the world's foremost organic chemists.
Several locations will be available. Depending on the persons interested, one plot will be chosen and divided into small areas, for individual gardening. It is planned to contract the preparation of the ground and assess each participant an amount proportional to his share of the land.
Preceding the lecture the annual Dains memorial banquet will be held in the Castle Tea room by members of Alpha Chi Sigma. All interested in hearing the lecture are welcome to the dinner, Dr. Vanderwerf said.
Garden Ground Offered To Faculty
Members of the Kansas City chapter of the American Chemical society are expected to attend the lecture.
A plot of land has been offered by Chancellor Murphy and the Endowment association for use by faculty and staff members for gardening purposes.
Those interested in participating should contact Mr. Beasley at 204 Strong hall or Ralph Birdwhistell at 214 Bailey.
Kenneth E. Beasley, instructor in political science and an organizer of the plan, said the plan is a revival of one that operated for about four years during the past war.
Under this plan, grants will not be approved for general purposes but only in support of specific projects which can be justified by the applicant and defended before any legislative group interested in learning how the money is being spent.
The letter should contain the title of the project, outline of previous research, and budget of personnel and maintenance.
A faculty member seeking support for a particular project should send a letter of application to the budget committee with written endorsement of his department chairman.
Chancellor Murphy said projects will be favored which may be completed within the fiscal year.
Although the project in question may represent basic research, it will be useful to the budget committee to know the practical value of a proposed project pointed out.
In a final section the applicant should indicate percentage of time now devoted to research and percentage of time devoted to research if project is approved.
Chancellor Murphy said that applications for renewal of existing projects should include a report on progress accomplished to date. Supervisors of projects which will be completed under current grants are requested to file concise reports of the work accomplished.
The funds, if granted, should be used mostly to employ clerical and research assistants and purchase supplies and equipment. Although the salary is not for the investigator's salary, this is not the prime purpose of the grant.
All applications for these grants should be sent to the secretary of the budget committee, Raymond Nichols, in the cancellor's office.
Ban Thrift Book Sales On Campus
Sales of Student Thrift Books on the campus or in University dormitories is not permitted, the dean of men's office announced today.
"We can not allow campus sales of anything but campus products," Dean L. C. Woodruff said. Miss Peterson, acting dean of women, said however that student representatives have been permitted to enter some of the dormitories to explain the books.
The Thrift Books, carrying coupons offering services of 21 Law-
ards to holders of the books, are being sold by 14 students on the campus.
The coupons offer such things as a free ash tray, free tickets to various movie theaters when accompanied by a paying adult, a steak dinner, and a free grease job. About 1,700 of the Thrift Books have been sold as of this morning.
Humanities Lectures To Begin Tonight
The fifth annual Humanities lecture series will open at 8 p.m. at William H. Shoemaker's speech by William B. Shoemaker professor of romance languages.
"The Generation of '98 and the Question of Literary Responsibility," will be Professor Shoemaker's topic. The lectures are open to students.
Folklore Authority To Lecture Today
J. Frank Dobie, leading authority on culture of the Southwest, will speak at 4 p.m. today in Fraser theater.
The free lecture will be on "Tales of the Southwest." The public is invited to attend.
Mr. Dobie is nationally known for the many books he has written about longhorn cattle, coyotes and people of the southwestern part of the United States.
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1952 Letters:
Daily Kansan Editorials
Here Are Two Views On Phi Beta Kappa
A few weeks ago Phi Beta Kappa, national scholarship society, celebrated its 175th birthday. The occasion brought forth comment from college papers all across the nation. Some of the papers lauded the significance of the organization and its contributions while others suggested that in reality it means little.
Almost all of our neighboring schools took note of the event and in doing so provided an interesting variety of views. Two of the most contrasting are those from the University of Colorado and the University of Nebraska. For the sake of comparison they are reprinted here:
From the Silver and Gold, University of Colorado:
In actuality, the Phi Beta Kappa key means just one thing: the wearer got high grades in college. It indicates about as much as high grades themselves indicate—except as the prestige of the key has made it an object apart from grades.
The Phi Beta Kappa key is meant to serve as a symbol and a recognition of intellectual accomplishment. But to some, symbol has become the thing. The key signifies wisdom; the man wears the key. Touch the lever, omit the middle, slide them together; the man is wise.
On Phi Beta Kappa's 175th birthday, it may be well to remember that a key—like paint—can cover many flaws. It is the man and the architecture that matter.
Phi Beta Kappa has a definite function to fulfill—the promotion of growth and attainment. Let it not
lose sight of the wall in the sanctification of the wallpaper.
From the Daily Nebraskan, University of Nebraska:
Membership in the Phi Beta Kappa is one of few honors a University student can receive that is void of campus politics and based solely on individual achievements.
For this reason the recognition should carry a great deal of honor. Since its founding a 175 years ago on the campus of the college of William and Mary, Phi Beta Kappa has used the motto: Philosophy is the guide of life. . .
Part of the Phi Beta Kappa creed might well be used by other students: "... We have developed a force that can lead to self-destruction, but lack the wisdom to control and direct that force toward its proper ends. This is the crisis we are called upon to meet. . ."
Results Of Draft Tests Vary
I think that the Daily Kansan should have more sports coverage. By that I mean that the Kansan staff should not be so stingy with the space on the sports page. I don't know why, but the Kansan always picks on the poor old sports page to put all advertisements on.
Results of the recent draft deferment tests are being examined now to see some of the trends of modern education. Some of the facts turned up are quite interesting.
Of the several hundred thousand men who took the selective service college qualification tests, almost two-thirds of them made a score of 70 or better and passed.
UDK Needs More Sports Coverage
Throughout the nation there was a great variety in the scores. students here in the central area hit about the national average. In the middle Atlantic states the percentage rose to where almost 70 per cent of the students made the passing score. But in the east south central region only 32 per cent of the students made the grade.
It is doubtful whether any conclusions should be drawn this early after the announcement of the results. However, there is present a clear trend which will deserve watching.
The final tabulation showed that well over half the northerners passed, while less than 40 per cent of the southerners did.
If the wide variance in the scores continues, then the test either is being pitched so that the type of education received in the eastern schools is overemphasized, or the education there simply is better. —Joe Taylor.
Dear Editor:
P. T. Barnum, the great circus man, visited Hays in October 1870. The Topeka State Record of Oct. 26, 1870 says that he stopped off to satify his taste for curiosities and lost $150 in a poker game with some of the town's youths.
Wyandotte county had 1,094.8 inhabitants per square mile in 1950, according to the U.S. census, making it the most thickly settled county in Kansas. Although second in total population, Wyandotte is the smallest Kansas county in land area.
I'm not saying that advertisements should be kept out of the sports page entirely, but an even amount of advertisements should be put in other sections of the paper. If that is not possible the Kansan should put out a twelve page edition instead of its customary eight. However, if there is a shortage of important sports news at the time advertisements serve as a good device to take care of excess space and relieve the burden of the sports editor.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room
KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn.
Associate Director, National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, New York City.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Lately I have noticed in the Kansas that there hasn't been any coverage of men's intramural basketball. I know the reason is that there is a shortage of available help in that particular section as I have talked to Jackie Jones, sports editor, and have donated my services to help out on the Kansan sports page.
EDUTURAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
Editorial Assistants ... Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahm
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Halman,
Joe Lostelic, Jim Powers
City Editor ... Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newman
Jerry Renner, Katherine Swarts
Telegraph Editor ... Charles Burch
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Max Thompson
Society Editor ... Diane Stonebreaker
Assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Paulyne Patterson
Sports Editor ... Jackie Jones
News Advisor ... Victor J. Danilov
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ... Dorothy Hadrick
Advertising Manager ... Emory Williams
National Advertising Manager ... Virginia Johnston
Circulation Manager ... Ted Barbera
Classified Advertising Manager ... Elaine Mitchell
Promotion Manager ... Phil Witlox
Business Advisor ... R. W. Doores
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1) a semester (in Law-
rence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except
the last week of Fall. University holidays and examination periods. Phil Witlox
class master Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Shortage of help on the sports page might be a reason there is a lack of school spirit at the present time.
Robert Wohlman College freshman
Comments . . .
Editor's note: The amount of advertising in any issue of the Daily Kansan usually can't be regulated or predicted, hence the sports page may appear heavy at times, but it usually will not carry more than its share of ads.
The 12-page editions you mention are not used unless there is sufficient advertising to carry a paper that large. Also there is a shortage of newsprint which makes it necessary for the Daily Kansan, and other papers, to economize whenever possible.
You are to be commended for donating your services to the sports page. There has been a shortage of help there and the Daily Kansan appreciates your gesture.
"Be Kind to Profs Week"
Initiating a "Be Kind to Professors Week," the Dynamo, Mount Union college (Ohio), suggests a few "don'ts" to students;
Don't sleep during exams. The chairs are awfully hard and might give you a stiff back.
Don't take off your shoes in class unless your mother has darned your socks recently.
Don't hold hands with your "true love" in class. It makes life difficult for the seven people sitting between you.
Don't take notes on a typewriter. This is terribly distracting to the students trying to sleep.
And above all, remember: Professors are just like people.
Jackie Jensen has confessed he would be a better replacement for Joe DiMaggio as New York Yankee centerfielder, than Mickey Mantel. He who toots his own horn too much may become too short-winded to be a centerfielder.
A fire in Hollywood which gutted the center section of the Max Factor and Company cosmetic warehouse may raise the cost of beauty.
Zigler
"Outside the class room he is wonderful to know. But inside, he's a veritable monster!"
'Ike' A Popular Candidate But Couldn't Control Party
Politics is not a profession which one can take up at a moment' notice. For a noted soldier, political activity may have unfortunate repercussions. One has only to look at the case of General Marshall whose prestige and popularity have waned, however undeservedly recently.
Don't climb on the "Eisenhower for President" bandwagon yet.
We'll admit it is difficult to live in the midwest and by the clamor and glamour of the Eisenhower "grass roots" can, pallig, which originated in Abilene of our own state. But in an issue as important as electing the best possible President to guide the United States for the next four years, considerations of home stat loyalty must be set aside in favor of those of national interest.
On the other hand, the general has had hardly any experience as an executive, outside of military positions. A recent article in Cosmopolitan magazine, which examined his term as president or Columbia university after World War II, would lead one to believe that "Ike" was well liked by students and faculty, but not respected, too much for his achievements as president.
The General, political writers generally agree, could easily w the next election.. He is one of the most popular figures on the national scene today. In addition, he probably has greater pg big around the world currently than any other American.
But the Presidency is no position for which voter popularity should solely determine the occupant. Being the favorite of the people might easily get "Ike" into the Presidency of the most powerful nation of the world today, but unless he has the politicians of his own party behind him, his executive and legislative effectiveness will be almost nil.
A politician (or statesman, if you prefer) is needed—a man who could marshal the forces of the majority party behind him. Gordon Harrison, in the January issue of Harper's Magazine, writes:
The nomination of Eisenhower by the Republicans would set up at least one opposing factor in the same party. The powerful faction led by Sen. Robert Taft holds opposite views on foreign affairs that does Eisenhower. Mr. Harrison writes that acceptance of Eisenhower "would in general repudiate the orthodox Republican stand and accept the Truman program."
"If Eisenhower is nominated, he will find himself not the leader of a party, not even the leader of a wing of the party, but an individual . . . faced with the problem of creating at the same time an administration and a party base for it."
And it would. General Eisenhower has been a leading influence in shaping the Truman European program, what with his work in NATO and SHAPE.
"Ike," you're a good man. Stay in Europe.
Bob Stewart.
News From Other Campuses
Study Tips At Kansas City U. Minnesota Prof. Dropped
Study Tips At Kansas City
A system of how-to-study known as the Survey-Q-2R was introduced to the University of Kansas City freshman class during last fall's liberal arts orientation program. Tips given students include: frequent brief reviews are better than cramming, it is better to study half an hour each day than two hours all at once, it is better to get a good night's sleep before an examination, and reviewing immediately before an exam will just confuse facts.
The case of Dr. Forrest O. Wiggins, University of Minnesota philosophy instructor, appears closed.
The board of regents has refused a student petition asking the board to reconsider the administration's dropping of Wiggins. And a faculty committee on tenure and academic freedom has issued an 18-page report saying there is no evidence that the dismissal of Wiggins is a violation of academic freedom.
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Norwegian Doctor Team,
Practicing Now At Watkins Hospital, Came To America To Get Acquainted
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1952 University Daily Kansan PAGE 3
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By DON NIELSEN
A Norwegian man and wife doctor team is practicing here because they think “it's a good idea to get acquainted with the American people.”
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experiencelartive i resident o to believe respecte
man wha
u. Gordon
s:
influence work in
t O. Wigota philoclosed.
uld set up
ful faction
fairs than
of Eisen-
can stance
refused of board to distraction a faculty academic page-repage despite that a professor
moment fortunate Marshall servedly
Dr. Hans K. Hilberg and his wife Shelma are working at Watkins hospital. Ordinarily, doctors who are not citizens are not allowed to practice medicine in the United States. They are forbidden, however, to engage in private practice.
The doctors Hilberg were married in 1946 in Oslo, Norway, during their last semester at Oslo Medical college. They were graduated in the same class, and have worked as a team since. The couple's home, before they came here, was in Hamar, Norway, a town of about the size of Oslo. The Hilbergs came to this country in time for the beginning of the fall semester last year.
ewart.
The doctors have worked together
in Evje, Farsand, Kristiansand and
lamas. in Norway. Most of their
Dr. Hilberg recalled the waste over which the armies passed while the Nazis were retreating. In keeping with a "scorched earth" policy, the Germans destroyed everything they passed. Dr. Hilberg said he travelled with the army for more than eight months without seeing a
During the war, Dr. Hans Hilberg fought with the Norwegian Army in the campaigns in northern Norway. He was with some of the ski troops who helped to drive the Germans from Norway. These troops, Dr. Hilberg said, were clad in "disappearing suits" of pure white. Their skis, and sometimes even their riffles, were painted white as protective camouflage against the snowy background.
jobs were in hospitals in these towns.
single house intact.
The Hilbergs, who live at 941 Kentucky, have two sons, Bjoern Eris, 5, and Per Kreistian, 3.
MRS. THELMA HILBERG
Kansas passed its first workmen's compensation law on March 14, 1911. This act, which went into effect on Jan. 1, 1912, was the sixth one of its kind to be made effective in the United States.
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OR what really happened on February 14th
One Man's Valentine is Another Man's Swan-Song
Once there was a freshman who had a Problem. He couldn't get to the frust zone, but he'd go out with them and wade briskly through a steak. But when it came
A. PARKER
There's a factual point to this frivolous case history: No message is as pleasing and convincing as a telegram; noone gets a more positive reaction. Nothing makes a gal or girl give up, nothing makes a mother whether it congratulations to Dad or love to Mother or flicker to a Date with Destiny. Want just call Western Union.
time to say Good-night, just as he needed to collect a modest return on his Investment, he'd wind up with a face of Solitars. Discourasing.
In desperation, he calculated himself a new angle. He ignored February 13th completely. Didn't send out a single Billet-doux. But on the morning of February 14th, he strode down to the Western Union office and sent Telegrams to a carefully selected list of fifty Females. Very touching messages, on paper, on phone. Then he went back to his room and shaved expectantly. The first starry-eyed Girl drove up an hour later. The procession kept up all day. Talk about a Mouse-Trap! Now he's very happy. So are all his Wives. We need Jocca. So are all her Wives.
Be Happy-GO LUCKY!
smoke the world's best cigarette-
You ought to smoke 'em too!
They're round and firm and fully packed;
Here's Lucky Strike to you!
Sue Titcomb
Texas State College for Women
LUCKY
STRIKE
IT'S NOTATED
CIGARETTES
L.S./M.F.T.
O.A.T.Co.
PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company
If you and she have had a spat,
And you two now are partin'
To patch things up give her a gift
Of Luckies by the carton!
Selwyn Steinberg
City College of New York
LADY AND HIS MAN
LUCKY
STRIKE
IT'S TOMATED
CIGARETTES
LUCKIES TASTE BETTER!
The difference between "just smoking" and really enjoy ing your smoke is the taste of a cigarette. You can taste the difference in the smoother, mellower, more enjoyable taste of a Lucky . . . for two important reasons. First, L.S./ M.F.T.-Lucky Strike means fine tobacco .. fine, mild tobacco that tastes better. Second, Luckies are made to taste better...proved bestmade of all five principal brands. So reach for a Lucky. Enjoy the cigarette that tastes better! Be Happy-Go Lucky! Buy a carton today!
MERCY MAYOR
King Midas sat upon his throne And uttered this decree, "The golden touch you've heard about Is L.S./M.F.T." Mark Simpson Appalachian State Teachers
L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco
PAGE 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1952
Intramural Play In Basketball Has Excitement
Bv BOB WOHLMAN
We talk about school spirit and what it might not be at the present time, but there certainly is plenty of spirit in intramural activities.
I was in Robinson annex several week ago watching two fraternity teams play basketball. There were Phi Delta Theta and Phi Gamma Delta. The place was packed, and I had to stand to watch the game.
Phi Delta was leading, 31-28, with 30 seconds left. Phi Gamma Delta had possession. Jim Potts, Phi Gamma guard, sank a long set shot to close the deficit to 31-30. Phi Delt took the ball out of bounds after the basket, but a full-court press lent them from scoring.
I'll never forget the hectic final 30 seconds of the game, not to say anything about the early part. It was one of those close down to the wire affairs.
Alan Heath, Phi Delt forward plucked the ball out of the air and let go with a right-handed hook just as the final buzzer sounded. The bank bilked in off the boards, and Phi Delt got the decision, 33-32.
The crowd was in an uproar, but Phi Delt was not to be denied as it took the ball out of bounds. Feeling that it was a lost cause, John Simons of Phi Delt took a long desperation shot that was short.
Phi Gamma took time out with exactly 17 seconds remaining to play. Time resumed and Phi Gamma gained possession, and worked the ball around for a long shot which failed. But Don Feller tipped in the rebound with five seconds left to give them a 32-31 lead.
Bedlam broke loose in the annex, spectators raced out onto the court and picked up Heath. The excitement was terrific; and this is the spirit found in all intramural sports.
Johnny Mize In Last Season
Deland, Fla. —(U.P.)—Mountainous Johnny Mize admitted today that he was facing his last season in the big leagues and in the role of an old baseball hero preparing to step down he picked young Mickey Mantle as the potential new star of the New York Yankees.
Speaking straight from the shoulder, big Jawn also suggested that the world champions might be an even more horrible win that Joe Di-Maggio has retired.
"There always has been one big man with the Yankees down through' the years," he explained. "Go back and you'll remember, fellows like Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and DiMaggio. Well, Mantle is the lad who can step into that spot now."
"Mickey is fast and he can hit," Mize added, "but there is more to it than that. It takes a certain something, call it a special spark, to lead a ball club like the Yankees—to be their big gun—and Mantle has indicated that he has it. I know Mantle had a bit of trouble last year but I think he has his feet on the ground now."
"Joe was a great ball player but he didn't have it last season," Mize said. "Still, he received most of the attention. By that I mean publicity. and don't think ball players can't read."
"So it begins to get them down when they read that they can't win without this player or that player," he continued. "Not that they think they can't, but it aggravates them."
Now, Mize thinks other players on the Yankee team will get more individual recognition. And, for the time being at home, he has a recognition to be between shortstop Phil Rizzuto and catcher Yogi Berra.
"But when the dust clears away, I believe you'll find that Mantle winds up as the new big gun of the Yankees," he added.
Mize doesn't really expect to be around by that time. He admits that he took a salary cut this season for his role will be primarily that of an experienced big bat at the plate in the pinches.
DONT FORGET YOUR VALENTINE
DONT FORGET YOUR VALENTINE
For Flowers Of DISTINCTION Call 363
ALLISON Flower AT THOMAS
941 Mass. Flowers by Wire Phone 363
I'll just provide a description of the image.
The image features a woman smiling broadly at the camera. She has light-colored hair styled in waves and is wearing a decorative garment with intricate lace patterns. In her hands, she holds a bouquet of roses. The background is a plain, light color that contrasts with her attire and makeup.
ALLISON
AT
THOMAS
Flower Shop
PAGE 5
University Daily Kansan
Iowa State Scares Kansas Before Losing Game 55-50
By JACKIE JONES
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
The Iowa State Cyclones refused to believe that they were the underdogs in their Monday night meeting with the Kansas Jayhawks, and proceeded to give Coach F. C. Phog Allen's squad a big scare before falling 55 to 50.
As the first half ended, Kansas held a slim five point lead, but were unable to hold onto this margin and when the final quarter began Iowa State had the score all tied up at 43 each.
The Cyclones were unprepared for the accurate long shots of Bill Hougland, and they refused to move out to block his shots in the final quarter. He tied Lovellette for Kansas high point honors with 13, six of them on long heaves in the hectic fourth quarter.
Clyde Lovelle and B. H. Born, both of Allen's tree-topping centers, fouled out in the third stanza, but John Keller moved into the post position and the Jayhawks began to hit from the outside.
Lovellie scored all of his points in the first half, playing only six shots and secured the second quarter. Born follows with his fifth personal within a few minutes.
Scoring honors for the night were shared by Jim Stange and Delmar Dierckes of the Cyclones. Each had 15 points, two better than Lovellette.
As third quarter began Diercels of Iowa State scored to make it 35 to 31, Hess sank a long shot, Charlie Hoag fouled Stange and the Cyclone hit him for a free throw, and Diercels hit another shot to knot the score at 35 each.
Iowa State went ahead with five minutes to play in the third quarter on a lay-up by Stange, but Hoag came back with another long shot to again tie the score. The lead changed hands twice more in the quarter, and was tied going into the
final period.
Hougland led off the fourth quarter with one of his spectacular shots from beyond the free throw strip, and Kansas was never again behind. Long tied it up at 45 each, but Kelley, Kenney and Hougland each scored in rapid succession. In the first six minutes of the last period, the Jayhawks capitalized on all Cyclone errors, scoring eight points to a single free throw for Staters.
Iowa State (50) G FT F
Hess 2 5 3
Stange 3 6 5
Van Cleave 0 1 1
Diercks 3 9 4
Koch 1 0 2
Long 3 3 2
Luhring 0 2 4
Totals 12 26 21
Kansas (55) G FT F
Kenney 3 5 3
Lienhard 2 0 4
Heitholt 0 0 1
Keller 0 0 4
Hoag 1 1 2
Lovellette 4 5 5
Bom 2 2 5
Kelley 4 0 3
Hougland 4 3 2
Smith 0 0 1
Totals ... 20 15 30
Score by Quarters
Iowa State 9 20 14 7-50
Kansas 21 13 13 12-55
Free Throws Missed — Iowa State
Stange 3, Dierckers 2, Kearn 2, Kenney 2, Lienhard, Hoag, Born 2
Kelley 2, Houghton.
Winner Of Daytona Beach Speed Race Likes To Sell Gas In Service Station.
Daytona Beach, Fla — (U.P.)— One hour after he won the national stock car championship by winging home on a prayer, burly Marshall Teague was back pumping gas at his service station and looking completely unlike a man who just had spent two hours in a roaring bedlam
Not long before, the former B-29 flight engineer had been hurling his Hudson Hornet around the four-mile beach-road course at an average of 84.65 miles an hour. That means he had threaded his way through 62 other cars, two-feet-deep sand ruts and tortuous curves at top speed of 110 miles an hour for the hour and 46 minutes it took him to cover the 160 miles.
It was his second straight triumph in this annual event over Daytona's famed speedway, but Teague was busy wiping windshields, checking oil and inflating tires for the trade. As the slow-talking, fast-driving Floridan explained:
sating hours on the course, had been for fun. Because the big man who started driving in 1945 counts the speedway as strictly "for laughs" and a sideline in which despite his success there isn't much financial return.
This is my business.
The other, those perilous, pul-
"Last year I won five good races and financially made very little," he explained. "But I sure like to go along for the ride."
His ride this time was a breeze, for he won going away by a full minute and 21 seconds over Herb Thomas, of Olivia, N. C. but it was a ride he almost didn't take—and almost didn't finish.
Last fall the black-haired man went to Mexico and drove in the 2,100-mile Trans-Mexico race. He finished sixth. But he was suspended from Nascar, which sanctions United States events, for competing in what was ruled an outlaw race. Teague debated for a while whether to pay a $575 fine but finally shelled out.
Kansas went into a stall for the last two minutes, and successfully kept the ball with some excellent passing.
With four minutes remaining, Long hit a free throw for Iowa State making the score 50 to 55 in favor of Kansas. This was the final margin of victory as neither team was able to hit in their final attempts.
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Temple 88, Drexel Tech 68
Duquesne 68, St. Bonaventure 69
Oklahoma A&M 61, Bradley 59
Notre Dame 52, Butler 48
Kentucky 110, Mississippi State 66
Wichita 70, Houston 49
Illinois 84, Michigan State 62
Minnesota 74, Indiana 61
Kansas 55, Iowa State 50
Iowa 82, Michigan 59
Missouri 56, Oklahoma 50
Ohio State 79, Northwestern 61
Purdue 78, Wisconsin 67
Colorado 67, Nebraska 65
Alabama 88, Tennessee 75
American U. 87, Bridgewater 54
Wofford 70, The Citadel 69
Miami (Fla.) 76, Florida State 63
West Virginia 87, Richmond 55
Vanderbilt 84, Tulane 63
William & Mary 89, Wash. & Lee 75
Virginia 82, Catholic U. 65
Weaver's Accessories — Main Floor
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1952
Women's Finals Begin Tonight
The Women's Intramural basketball program will enter the final division play-offs tonight in Robinson gym, with four teams in action.
PROFESSIONAL DRAFTSMEN
At 7, Delta Delta Delta and Sigma Kappa will meet to decide which team will face the Jayettes in the semi-finals Wednesday.
Also at 7, a fast team of freshmen, Freshman AA, will attempt to upset one of the most powerful teams in intramural competition, Foster hall.
PROFESSIONAL
DRAFTSMEN
use the New
MICROTOMIC
—the Absolutely Uniform
DRAWING PENCIL
The winner of this game will meet Kappa Alpha Theta Wednesday in the other semi-final contest. The Thetas are Intramural champions
TRADE MARKS REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.
EBERHARD FABER 2H E
from the basketball season last year, and could repeat again this season.
from the basketball season last year, and could repeat again this season.
All of the teams in the play-offs went undefeated in the regular season of play and each has great scoring potentials. From the offensive standpoint, Foster hall is tops in intramurals. They scored over sixty points in two of their regular games.
The games tonight should be action packed, as all four of the teams are fast and adept at ball handling. The tri-Delts are the shortest team in intramural competition, but their playing ability should equal that of Sigma Kappa.
TONIGHT
7:00
7:00
Stephenson — ASCE
8:00
Jolliffe—Phi Beta Pi
9:00
Feather Merchants — Battenfeld
10:00
Dark Horses — Geology club
Dark Horses — Geology club
EAGLE-A
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BOXED PAPERS
MERCAN WARNING PARTS GENERAL WARNINGS
THE MARKET AND AUDITORIUM
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For Your Queen of HEARTS
Songs of KU
Give your Valentine the gift her heart will always treasure an album of KU Songs. Eight popular KU Songs on 75 r.p.m. Non-breakable RCA Records. $4.90
STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE
AGE 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1952
Kappa Sigma Fraternity Gives Annual 'Black And White' Dance
The "black and white" formal dinner-dance, a traditional event for Kappa Sigma fraternity chapters over the continent, was held in the chapter house at 1045 West Hills road Saturday night.
A realm of black and white was created as black crepe paper walls in the hall and living room were overlaid with twisted white streamers. The false black ceiling in the living room was also draped with white streamers.
A large cast of the fraternity crest over the fireplace was illuminated by a special light so that alternate rays of black and white streamed from the crest to the edges of the fireplace.
Two classic Greek columns in the living room were the setting for a painted backdrop of a scene from ancient Greece.
The morning room and the red room, off the living room, were decorated with abstract drawings of dominoes and piano keys and notes. Black and white crepe roses were used on the border trimmings in each room.
Dinner was served at candlelit tables. Each table was decorated with red ribbon and green leaves representing the fraternity colors, scarlet, white and green.
The dinner consisted of filet mignon, escaped potatoes, fantasy salad, frozen peas, assorted relishes, ice cream meringue and coffee.
During dinner Dick Fowler played piano music. Charles Livingood and his orchestra provided music for the rest of the evening.
The chaperones were Mrs. Frank M. Baird, Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. J. I. Hollingsworth and Mrs. Dna M. Stewart.
The guests were Barbara Shepp,
Kay Peters, Nancy Neighbor, Gene
Ann Harb, Donna Powell, Ruth
Abercrombie, Cookie Brais, Martha Houston, Coralynall Wahlberg, Jean Denman and Winifred Miller.
Ruth Stutz, Delores Mausolf, Anne Lehmann, Denni Wade, Marty Zeigler, Jacqueline Crews, Marijane Lynch, Ethelyn Bird, Dorothy Brunn, Carol Judson, Claire Ensign, Marguerite Wernette and Nancy Chamberlin.
Nancy Hemphill, Jim Peg Stout, Sharon Fitzpatrick, Bonnie Berryhill, Monnie Silverstun, Peggy Long, Barbara Logan, Claire Walker, Sherry Johnston, Beverly Jackson, Shirley Deniston and Fredrica Voiola.
Marimae Voiland, Ruth Ann Marsh, Carolyn Laing, Jean Denny, R. B. Fowler, Carole Stout, Eileen Rogers, Mary Louise Harding, Geerte Van Oppen, Arden Angst, Mary Frances Haines, Janet Stites and Lou Ann Montgomery.
Ellen Krug, Rosanna Berryhill,
Anne Maye Laughlan, Sharon Bee-
eadorf, Marilyn Hixon, Kip Scarritt,
Marjean Sullivan, Ann Sims,
Martha Marley, Emily Missildine,
Marjorie Heard, Pat Howell and
Geraldine Odell.
Dee Ann Price, Jain Bortz, Ann Vandiver, Judith Ringer, Diane Baldwin, Barbara Jo Craig, Patty Soden, Marianne Harris, Berta Evans, Maxine Hubbard, Joan Piller and Sally Freeman.
Jill Ogilvy, Mary Lou Eklund,
Jane Hackmaster, Shirley VanAntwerp,
Donna MacDougall, Joyce Mater, Sara Ann Starry and Bettie Lee Ogan.
Have You Ever Wanted A Banana Coat Chances Are You'll Get It Before Long
Washington —(U,P)— I've always wanted a suit made out of banana peel and pineapple. And if everything goes according to plan, I may get it.
It's in the works.
The Mutual Security agency has announced the design of a new hand com by a U.S. technician and the beginning of a long range program or developing "exciting new fabrics" from native sources such as pineapple and banana fibers.
The MSA concludes that the Philippines is "well on its way to a major place in the world textiles market."
I can already see future advertisements: "You, too, will look smart in a half pineapple — half banana suit," or "Come in and try on the latest—a black dyeed pineapple topcoat and have a look at our light green banana sports shirts." This isn't fun-poking. The MSA
Marianne Strengell, a wheel in the American textile industry, develo-
mented an IOB tool and used it on a sheeI she is in Philippines on technical assistance project sponsored jointly by Economic Cooperation Administration (now the Mutual Security Agency) and the United Nations.
Hour dance, 7-8 p.m. Wednesday,
Monchonsia hall.
It seems that the narrow, weighty loom the natives once used could not turn out material wide enough to sell to any large extent. The 42-inch wide materials from the new loom can compete on the world market with machine-made fabrics.
Stateswomen Club, 4-5:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 200 Strong hall, bring
dues.
Psychology club. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 9 Strong hall. Business meeting. All psych students and faculty urged to attend.
Home Ec. Club, 4 p.m. Wednesday, 114 Fraser, stuffed animals will be completed. All attend.
Jay James, 3:30 p.m. Wednesday,
Pine room. Union.
Tau Sigma, 7:15 tonight, Robin-sin gym.
Socialist study club, 8 p.m. Wednesday, 104 Green. Dr. Chakravarty introducing a discussion on the foundations of socialism.
FACTS meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 210 Fraser. Fill ASC vacancies. All welcome.
Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, 111 Strong.
Rose Point
a Third Dimension Beauty
PATTERN IN
WALLACE
Sterling
6 PIECE place setting $32.50
Quill club, 4 today, Pine room.
Linnaean club, 7:30 tonight, 417 Snow hall. Dr. N. M. McClung showing several movies.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7:15 tonight,
Pine room. All members and pledges
please attend.
KU Young Republican club, 7:30 pm. Thursday, 106 Green hall. Rep. Charles D. Stough, speaker, election of officers.
Official Bulletin
The loom (called a "flyshuttle") is simple in design. It can weave anything from pineapple fiber to jute and will be manufactured in the Phillippines for the islands' 25,000 home weavers.
Gustafson
Gustafson COLLEGE - JEWELER 809 Mass.
The whole idea of the new loom is to make use of native fibers. Miss Strengell carried on a long research program, testing this fiber and that.
When Miss Strengell and a group of experts went to the islands they were determined not to upset the routine of the people by imposing alien methods upon them.
History club, 7 p.m. Wednesday Pine room, Union. Election to History Club Committee. John B George, representative of the Institute of Current World Affairs, speaker.
They were concerned more with the full development of Philippine resources and skills. They built the new loom mostly from wood that the natives could get in their own jungles.
"The fiber which seems to hold most possibilities," she said, "is that which comes from the banana. It is soft, has a beautiful sheen and a silvery cast and the fiber is long enough to spin easily."
Women's Hairstyles Are More Than They Are Cut Up To Be
Women's latest hairstyles have humorously been tagged by the male world as one end of a'dog or the other end of a horse.
Bv DIANNE STONEBRAKER
The former refers to the poodle cut, and is characterized by hair stripped and ruffled like head lettuce. The latter refers to the horsetail style, where the hair is yanked backward from the scalp and held in position by ribbons or some facsimile.
The male, of course, looks upon this new vogue as just another female fad, but in reality this so-called fad illustrates a very basic difference between the male and female worlds.
At least we of the feminine world do not grow stagnant in our fashions. A man either has hair or a crew cut, and that's about it. To illustrate the point further, women's skirts go up and down, but men's pants remain the same length year after year. Well, you men might ask, so what are you trying to prove?
And now look at the men. There has been the era of the powdered
Consider for a moment, my dear young men, the female hairstyle eras. There has been the pompadour, the Gibson girl knot, the cooie cut, complete with "rats," the spit curl, the bang, the bob, the feather cut, the Toni home permanent and now the poodle cut and horsetail.
Chi Chi Chi Initiates LaMaster Charles LaMaster, engineering freshman from LaCygne, recently was initiated into Chi Chi Chi fraternity.
Watkins Hall Hour Dance Watkins hall will entertain with an open hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday night.
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Which only goes to prove that although men's hairstyles may last longer than those of a woman, women's hair lasts longer.
YOUR EYES
CARL'S
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eye
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Colorado Ski Party Feb.22-23
Reservations needed by Feb. 12th.
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TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange tours or individual iterations. Photos Mrs. Lois Odafer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. tf
University Daily Kansan
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
at our summer camp. Summer. Call Miss Glesseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 20.
BUSINESS SERVICE
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 756 hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term service, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biolog- reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Boer, 838 La. Ap. 4, upstairs. Ph. 2775J.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
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STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment area and services for client service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and customer-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. to midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Encourage them to bring for fun, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tl
FOR SALE
TYPEWRITE SUPPLIES! All top grade bond paper, onion skin, and carbon papers to make your typing easier. Student Union Book Store. 15
BEAT-UP '36 Plymouth marked down to $60. Goes. Sealed-seam beams lights. Strong engine and battery. Displayed edge drill field, west of Sumside. Call 2841R. 18
BOOK-EMASE IS the collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, anywhere. It holds the pages in place. Now just 8c at your Student Union Book Store. 15
SPECIAL STUDENT RATES on Time. Life, and Newsweek subscriptions. Get yours now at the Student Union Book Store. 15
NEW SHIPMENT OF POCKET BOOKS
Students bring them over
Student Union Book Store.
ONE K & E log duplex Duprecit slide rule in perfect condition. Call 1279
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands priced to you. - Awaken to music with radio, radio. See these values at Goodrich, 923 Mass. 2-1
FOR RENT
RENT A TYPEWRITE NOW! Choose from our wide selection of portables. your grades improve when you type your papers. Student Union Box 15 Store.
ROOM FOR BOYS; nicely furnished,
single rooms; convenient to KU and
schools. Have double to share with
junior in School of Business—twain
1303 Vermont.
VACANCY for two boys. 1218 Miss.
phone 514. 18
WANTED: Girl graduate student to
work on apartment building.
Call after 5 p.m. 3690W
MISCELLANEOUS
LOST
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
person, buyers. William J. Vilner,
Almen, 31108.
BLACK. SUEDE purse with bilfold and identification in Union cafeteria after 1 p.m., call 8. Identification verified, call 8. Lance at 900. No questions asked.
DIETZEEN Silderulen in room 110 Mar-
Jones, 307 Marvin, 9-12. Please see B
Jones, 307 Marvin, 9-12.
HELP WANTED
THE MARKET RESEARCH Department of Procter and Gamble has several traveling positions open for young women college graduates to conduct consumer research. Students will be campus Feb. 15 to interview interested persons. No selling: ages 21-65; ability in simple arithmetic; driver's license; all expenses paid plus salary training. Training is offered in talking to Miss Weiss may sign at the School of Business office.
Three University art teachers each have two works in Midwest Art exhibition at the Joslyn Museum of Art in Omaha, Neb. This show runs the latter part of February through March.
3 Art Teachers' Paintings Shown
The jury accepted two oil paintings by Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting. They are "Angel of Judgment" and "Trainee," the latter inspired by Mr. Green's recruit training at Camp Lee, Va.
John Armstrong, also an instructor in drawing and painting, is represented by "Landscape Normandy," in oil, and "City Landscape," a casein painting.
The pieces by William D. Eckert, instructor in drawing and painting, are an oil "Off Stage," and a 3-color block print "Promenade."
The Spanish first claimed the area that is now Kansas in 1541 when Coronado explored the St. Peter and St. Paul's river (believed to be the present Arkansas river) into Quivira, what is now central Kansas.
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1952
Hedda Hopper says-
"20th Century-Fox's
Decision Before Dawn
is one of Hollywood's
great pictures"
The live muskrat was sent to the University by Homer Lydick of the animal institution, evidently caught the animal in a trap. One of its front lers is missing.
If the trait is dominant, it may show in the first generation but it may also be lethal, said Mr. Stains. The albanism trait often carries with it certain other physical characteristics which tend to make the animal weak or unhealthy, he explained.
R. H. Baker, assistant professor of zoology, and Howard Stains, graduate student, said the biological survey intends to use the muskrat in an attempt to produce an albino muskrat because the animal is recessive, they will have more albino muskrat in two generations, about a year and a half.
John Weir, assistant professor of zoology, said the animal is not a true albino in that it's eyes are blue, not pink. Muskrat's eyes are usually brown.
The muskrat seems to be very
Dr. Weir said that he can only speculate about the animal's history having no progeny test or pedigree information to go on. He believes that the original albino mutation was in the animal's family many generations ago and is probably a recessive characteristic.
Student Union Gets7 Records
Albino Muskrat Caught, Given To KU For Biological Study
An albino muskrat, believed to be the second ever captured, has been sent to the University's biological survey.
Jumping
Seven new long-playing classical records were received Monday by the Student Union for use in the music and browsing room.
The records are of works by Schonberg, Bach, Berlioz, Villa-Lobos, Hindemith, Harold and Bartok.
Directed by ANATOLE LITVAK who startled the world with "The Snake Pit"
Also recently added to the room's library are 27 new books chosen by a student and faculty committee. The new volumes include such books as "Boswell's London Journal," "The New Yorker 25th Anniversary Album," "Life's Picture Story of World War II," "The Best of Perleman" and "Cavalcade of American Horses," by Pers Crowell.
- STARTS
FRIDAY • New PATEE
PHONE 321
The Union has 20 books on order for the browsing room including "American Social Insects" by Charles Michener, professor of entomology.
NOW SHOWING
Evening Features 7:38-9:38
THE HILARIOUS TALE OF
A DOG WHO WENT TO
SEE A GUY
ABOUT A
GIRL!
THE HILARIOUS TALE OF
A DOG WHO WENT TO
SEE A GUY
ABOUT A
GIRL!
UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL presents
DICK PEGGY
POWELL DOW
"You Never
Can Tell"
UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL PRESENTS
DICK PEGGY
POWELL DOW
"You Never
Can Tell."
with JOYCE HOLDEN·CHARLES DRAKE
Extra Added • Bugs Bunny Cartoon • Comedy • News
normal in every respect but his color. He is of average weight and in apparently good health.
Carrots seem to be the muskraf's favorite food. Lettuce is also eaten but rabbit food has not been tried.
IN PATEE
PHONE 321
At present it's home is a small wire and glass cage in the museum's Small Animal house. Mr. Stains said a new home will have to be found for the muskrat as the Small Animal House. It must be muskrat's cage too confining, but so far, he added, it seems to be doing fine.
Animal Species To Be Classified
A zoological research project at the University concerned with species classification of North American mammals will begin in a few weeks when Dr. Rollin H. Baker, assistant curator of mammals, goes on a collecting expedition to northern Mexico.
Dr. Baker and Dr. E. Raymond Hall, director of Museum of Natural History, will direct exploratory trips to various parts of North America which they term "critical areas." They will study various species or sub-species. Dr. Baker will work in Coahuila, a northern state of Mexico, and Dr. Hall will go as far as Alaska.
The KU study is made possible by a grant of $23,900 from the National Science foundation.
Guiding the three-year research will be Dr. Hall. KU is one of the three top institutions during speciation work, Dr. Hall said.
The classification of mammals into species or sub-species is important because of the information on how and where animals exist and the diseases they carry.
"The primary purpose of the research is to determine if there are different species of animals or only sub-species in certain areas," Dr. Hall said. "We want to find out what the species are and where they are."
Th
THE GREATNESS,
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OF THE
NORTHWEST
FRONTIER!
UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL presi
JAMES STEWART
ARTHUR KENNEDY
JULIA ADAMS
ROCK HUDSON
BEND OF
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COLOR BY
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MID-WEST PREMIERE SHOWING SOON
Granada
Greeley county, the county name for Horace Greeley, has the lowes average population in the state only 2.6 inhabitants per square mile according to the 1950 U.S. census.
Comfort Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
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Last Times Tonite
"THE HARLEM
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"SILVER CANYON"
WED. - THURS.
"CULT" CROOKS EXPOSED in police crackdown!
RKO presents
BUNCO
SQUAD
ROBERT STERLING
JOAN DIXON
RICARDO CORTEZ
and DANTE
Gregory Peck Virginia Mayo "CAPTAIN HORATIO HORRIBLE ONE
Co-Feature
HORNBLOWER"
NOW! ENDS
WEDNESDAY
JEANNE CRAIN
Scott Thelma
Brady Ritter
The Kind of Motion Picture That Walks Right Into Your Heart!
"The Model and the Marriage Broker"
ADDED Color Cartoon In The News The True Life Story of King George VI
STARTS THURSDAY
DARING
REVEALING!
TIMELY!
THE
UNKNOWN MAN
WALTER PIDGEON
ANN HARDING • BARRY SULLIVAN
A METRO-GOLDWYN-MAY PICTURE
GRANADA
PAGE 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1952
A. H. L.
SPEAKERS BUREAU IN ACTION—Win Koerper, college senior, gives his side of the argument in a Speakers bureau debate with Emporia State Teachers college at a Sertoma club meeting recently. Others in the picture are E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, and Kenneth Dam, college sophomore—Kansan photo by William Stanfill.
Student Orators Give Speech And Programs
By WILLIAM E. STANFILL
Student speakers from KU will go practically anywhere, anytime, to speak on practically any subject. Charge for the service? Seven cents a mile for the groups' transportation expenses.
The demand for students to speak on various occasions here and in neighboring towns was responsible for the forming of the new University speakers bureau, sponsored by the department of speech and drama. The bureau is directed by E. C. Buehler, professor of speech.
The bureau is composed of a panel of 25 students who are trained and experienced in public speaking. These students are varity debaters, graduate and foreign students, forensic experts, and campus orators.
Among the more serious topics the speakers will discuss are our foreign policy in Asia, wage and price control measures, and flood control in the Missouri valley. In the lighter vein, variety programs by two to four speakers will be conducted.
The primary purposes of the bureau debate teams is to inform, entertain, and to stimulate thought on current issues. Speakers will be provided for programs by civic
clubs, lodges, high schools, study groups, banquets, and churches.
All of the programs are designed to meet time limits and individual needs of the groups desiring the services of the bureau. The programs are conducted by faculty members serving as master of ceremonies and the speakers are checked and supervised by members of the speech and drama department faculty.
After 5 Months, Debaters Find They Have Same 'Boss'
Kenneth Sulston, graduate student, from Kansas City, Kan., and Heywood Davis, college senior, from Kansas City, Mo., had known each other all fall. But they became better acquainted when named to represent the University at an international debate Feb. 19, against two Australian speakers. $ \textcircled{4} $
Davis casually mentioned that his father was in radio. Sulston, who divides his time between professional radio work and school, pricked up his ears. "What station is he with?"
"Dad is with WHB in Kansas City," was the reply. (Don Davis, president of WHB).
March Of Dimes Goes Over Quota
The March of Dimes drive at the University has passed its $500 quota, M. C. Slough, chairman of the drive, said today.
In all $507.50 has been collected mostly in large donations from faculty and staff members. This year students have not been solicited because of the Campus Chest drive, designed to avoid other solicitations.
There was one $40 and several $25 donations, Professor Slough said. The smallest contribution was 50 cents "Most of the money came in dollar bills and $5 checks," he said
Another $192 was added at the B team basketball game between KU and K-State last Friday. It was a regularly scheduled game with the proceeds going to the March of Dimes campaign.
Although the drive closes officially tomorrow, donations mailed to Professor Slough, 204 Green hall, will be accepted until the end of the month.
"He's my boss," said the surprised Sulston, who is known to the radio audience as Ken Hartley, WHB newscaster.
Sulston had known his employer had a son at KU. Likewise Davis had listened many times to Ken Hartley. But neither had identified the other during a semester of forensic work.
The pair will argue with the Australians on "Resolved, that this house prefers Groucho to Karl"—the reference being to the newspaper Groucho Marx. Marx and of Karl Marx, author of the Communist Manifesto.
Their opponents will be Robin Millhouse, University of Adelaide, and John Boyd Reid, Melbourne university. They were selected from participants in a debating festival of the University of Australian university students.
KU provides one of the 32 debates the visitors will have in this country.
Dr. Henry Horak, assistant professor of astronomy, will discuss "A Recent Theory of the Origin of the Solar System" at a meeting of the Geology club at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Lindley auditorium.
Geology Club To Hear Horak
Congressmen Pledge Fast Action To Halt Air Crashes
action to halt the deadly series of There was a strong feeling in the New Jersey congressional delegation that the Newark airport must remain closed, either permanently or until new safety measures can be worked out.
News Roundup
Membership cards for the spring semester will be distributed at the meeting. Any person interested in geology may attend and become a member.
Washington—(U.P.)—Shocked congressmen today promised drastic action to halt the deadly series of plane crashes at Elizabeth, N.J.
Sen. Robert C. Hendrickson (R-NJ) said staff members of both house and senate interstate commerce committees "have been on the job constantly" in the Elizabeth-Newark area, and as soon as possible they will report "every detail" to congress.
But some lawmakers said final plans should await the results of current investigations.
--cemetery to honor the memory of Abraham Lincoln.
London —(U.P.)— Sorrowing subjects of many races filed past the coffin of King George VI at the rate of 6,000 an hour today in a tribute all the more moving for its silence and lack of tears.
Sad Subjects File Past King's Bier
Nearly 100,000 citizens of the British empire were expected to walk slowly past the bier in historic Westminster hall before the massive wooden doors swing shut at 10 p.m. (4 p.m. CST).
Washington— (U.P.) —Republicans aimed a nationwide Lincoln day speech barrage at the Truman administration today.
As many more probably will pay homage on each of the two remaining days the dead King will lie in state before being taken to St. George's chapel at Windsor castle Friday for the funeral.
GOP Aims Attack At Administration
Sen. Andrew F. Schoeppel (R-Kan.) said in an address prepared for a GOP rally in Reno, Nev., that "unless the people, through the Republican party, stop the present trend of New Deal socialism, we will lose the greatest heritage of any people on the face of the earth."
Meanwhile, at Independence, Kan. state Republican leaders swarmed in today for the 16th annual Lincoln day rally.
Supporters were pushing the presidential nomination campaigns of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Sen. Robert Taft with their aims directed at the state and district sessions which will name the 22-member Kansas delegation to the national convention in July.
At Springfield, Ill., dignitaries from across the land gathered today at a wooden knoll in Oak Ridge
Taft Supporters Claim Victory
Washington—(U.P.)—Supporters of Sen. Robert A. Taft claimed a significant victory in Oklahoma today and predicted they will do even better in pivotal Pennsylvania.
But the rival forces of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower pooh-poohed the Taft claims.
Results of Oklahoma's state GOP convention Monday left Taft with a 6-5 edge over Eisenhower in their sharp contest for the state's 16 delegates to the national Republican presidential nomination contest. His other delegates are uncommitted and one favors Gen. Douglas MacArthur.
UN Troops Rout Snowstorm Attack
Eight Army Headquarters, Korea —(U.P.) About 430 Communist troops savagely attacked United Nations lines in a snowstorm on the eastern seaboard of infantrymen killed or wounded half of them in repelling the attack.
UN artillery and mortar fire caught the Reds in a devastating barrage at barbed wire entanglements in front of Allied positions and prevented them from climbing
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the Allied-held hill near the Mund-
dung valley.
An estimated 96 Communists were killed and 130 wounded in the attack. Another 200 were forced to turn back from the barbed wire.
The action was the heaviest in a day as Communist probing attacks hit UN lines all along the 145-mile Korean front for the first time in weeks.
Elks Offer Scholarships
The Elks National Foundation Trustees announce $15,000 in scholarship awards to be distributed in 1952.
Interested students should contact the Exalted Ruler or Secretary of the nearest Elks Lodge or Wynne W. Ester at Gorham, Kan., for instructions, application blanks, and further information.
Applicants will be judged on scholarship, citizenship, personality leadership, perseverance, resourcefulness, patriotism, and general worthiness.
Undergraduate students are eligible to file application for the awards that range from $500 to $900. In Kansas, four applicants, two men and two women, will receive $250 scholarships from the Kansas Elks association and two of the four will be considered for national awards.
Chiapusso Recital Postponed
The faculty recital to be given by Jan Chiapusco, professor of piano, which was scheduled for yesterday, has been postponed until Monday, March 10, the School of Fine Arts announced.
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University Daily Kansan
49th Year, No. 88
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1952
AWS Workshop Hears Answers To 5 Problems
Five problems of leadership were discussed by Mrs. Harold Harvey, instructor in speech and drama at the Lawrence Memorial high school, at the Associated Women Students leadership workshop Tuesday in Strong auditorium.
Mrs. Harvey, wife of Harold Harvey, instructor in speech, was active both in AWS and speech and drama when she attended the University.
The five problems mentioned by Mrs. Harvey were the acquiring of efficiency in the self, getting efficiency out of others, meeting criticism, meeting mistakes magnified out of proportion and the question—why am I doing this?
To acquire efficiency Mrs. Harvey suggested knowing the objectives of the organization and having clearly defined personal objectives as well.
Mrs. Harvey explained that while obtaining efficiency from others will always be a problem, the matter may be met by thorough explanations and specific instructions.
Making early deadlines is a help, she said, adding that at times it is possible to set them a week ahead in order to allow time for emergencies.
"There are three kinds of critics—those who don't like you, the gripers and the true critics who criticize your ideas instead of you," she said. "The first two should be expected and the last one accepted." No added.
Mistakes should be met with the same technique used with "spilled catup and coffee," she said. Do something about them, but if you can't, accent them.
Telling a disinterested person such as a roommate or a boy friend about errors will help keep them in the right proportion, she said.
There are two possible attitudes in response to the question "Why am I doing this?" that usually come toward the end of a period of lead-up. You can be bitter, or you can profit and come out on top," she said.
"The fact that you've made mistakes, others say you haven't done a good job and no one appreciates you should be shoved back to secondary consideration," Mrs. Harvey said.
Primary considerations should be honest answers to three questions, she said. Did I do the best I could? Have you helped me with mistakes? Have I profiled from my mistakes?
"Never quit a job as long as you're failure; quit when you have been successful once." Mrs. Harvey advised.
Naval Air Cadets May Finish Term
College men applying for the Naval aviation cadet program will not be called to active duty until June. This will allow them to complete the current semester of college work, Lt. E. W. Meneefee, Naval Aviation cadet procurement officer for this area, reports.
In order to qualify for the NAVCAD program, the man must be between the ages of 18 and 27, unmarried and have had two years of college. It is expected that applications will exceed quota restrictions near the end of this college year.
Men selected will be sent to the Naval Air station, Pensacola, Fla., for 18 months flight training. They may choose a commission as ensign in the Navy or second lieutenant in the Marine Corps.
College men interested in this program should write NAVCAD Naval Air station, Olathe.
'Ivan The Terrible' To Be Shown Friday
Lawrence, Kansas
The movie "Ivan the Terrible"
featuring the music of Sergei
Prokofiev will be shown Friday,
at 7:30 p.m.
The film is in Russian with English subtitles. It tells the story of Ivan from his coronation through his battles.
The New York Sun says that "Nikolai Cherkassov, as Ivan, gestures as though he were moving about on a great stage. He and his fellow actors overact with a robustness and enjoyment seldom seen off the operatic stage."
Art Exhibition Takes KU Work
Two more art teachers have been notified of acceptance of their works for the annual Midwest Art exhibition at the Joslyn museum in Omaha, Neb. Five of the KU staff now have nine pieces in the show which opens this week and will continue through March.
Miss Marjorie Whitney, professor of design, is represented by a watercolor "The Country," and John Parks, instructor in design, placed two etchings, "Webs" and "Girl with Net."
Mr. Green's pieces are two oils: "Angel of Judgment" and "Trainees", Mr. Eckert's are an oil "Off State" and a 3-color block print "Promenade", and Mr. Armstrong's are an oil "Landscape Normandy", and a casein painting "City Landscape".
Robert Green, John Armstrong,
and William D. Eckert, all of the
drawing and painting department,
with two paintings accepted by the
Visiting Lecturer Will Speak On East African Studies
John B. George will discuss his studies in East Africa at a meeting of the history club at 7 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Union. Mr. George studied in East Africa in 1950 and 1951 for the Institute of Current World Affairs.
First Humanities Lecturer Lauds Spanish Writers
Prof. William H. Shoemaker defended the generation of '98, a group of Spanish writers at the turn of the century, as not being irresponsible during their literary prominence, to open the fifth annual Humanities lecture series last night in Fraser theater.
Professor Shoemaker, chairman of the department of Romance languages and literature, maintained that the writers "squarely faced the national, social, and literary problems of their time. The first and most obvious characteristic of the work of the generation of '98 is its spirit of criticism and revolt," he said.
The pessimistic, critical, and negative attitude of the generation of '98 cannot be considered irresponsible. Professor Shoemaker asserted. "In its deep and basic desire for renovation, the generation of '98 not only sought improvements from outside Spain," he said. "It was more vitally concerned with regeneration from within," he added.
Coming to the forefront after the disastrous Spanish-American war, the generation of '98 held sway over the Spanish literary scene for 15 years and some remnants still remain. Professor Shoemaker explained.
Professor Shoemaker explained that the Europeanization of 'Spain from without and the regeneration from within was the main object of the generation of '88, for only in this way could Spain recover and be strong.
WEATHER
Mostly cloudy, with occasional rain or drizzle in the north and east this afternoon and tonight, changing to light snow in the north portion tonight. Partly cloudy southwest; colder with winds becoming strong northerly over the west this afternoon and in the east tonight; Thursday partly cloudy with diminishing winds and somewhat colder in the east portion.
Audience Entertained By Texan's Drawl, Tales
A Texan with a slow drawl and "constructive memory" entertained students and faculty in a special lecture on the merits of the coyote, yesterday afternoon in Fraser theater.
Oratory Contest Deadline Today
William A. Conboy, instructor in speech, and E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, request that entries in the Lorraine Buehler Oratorical contest be turned in by 5 p.m. today so they can plan the tryouts.
Mr. Conboy said late entries would be accepted in case of an emergency.
Entries should be turned in to Mr. Conboy or Mr. Buehler in 5 Green hall. Eight entries had been received Tuesday night and four more are expected from students who indicated they would enter.
the entrants are Richard Sheldon, college sophomore; Wilbur Good-seal, college junior; Don Dirks, college junior; "Woody" Davis, college senior; Sue Moyer, college freshman; Lee Baird, college freshman; Bill Nulton, college junior, and Lee Douglass, education sophomore.
Preliminaries begin at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 105 Green hall. They will be judged by members of the speech and drama department. The contest is open to the public.
Carillon Program Features Folk Tunes
American cowboy ballads have been selected for today's carillon program at 7 p.m.
They are "The Old Chisholm Trail," "The Dying Cowboy," "Brown-Eyed Lee" and "Git Along Little Dogies."
The program also includes:
"Le Rosier" (Rousseau), "Traumeri" (Schumann), "Rondo" (Peichler), "Gymnopedie" (Satie), and "Fugue" for carillon (Nees).
Co-op Purchasing Could Be Reality
Bv ALAN MARSHALL
A cooperative food-purchasing plan open to any "non-profit organization which serves students at the University" may soon become a reality. The plan, formulated by two University students, is complete, then expanded says A. I would easily be expanded into other trade goods.
The organization, known as the Jayhawk Purchasing association, was formulated by Joe Wimsatt and Tom White, business seniors. Lloyd Faust, assistant professor of business, and Tom Cannon, assistant professor of economics, served as an unofficial advisory board. Professor Faust drew up the formal constitution.
The basic idea of the program is to lower food costs by increasing the volume of purchasing. The organization is a non-profit, non-stock private corporation, organized under the corporation laws of Kansas.
It would consist of a board of directors composed of four faculty members, five members from the student body, and two ex-officio members. The latter, to be representatives, are the dept. of women and men, are not entitled to vote, may act only in an advisory capacity.
The board would be elected by the participants in the cooperative. They in turn would elect their own officers and select and employ a part-time manager.
It would be the duty of the manager to secure samples and prices from various wholesalers, have them tested and graded by dieticians, and distribute the results to the purchasing agent of each member group. The agent would then order a one-month supply of goods, return the order to the manager, who would compile the orders for the holes. He and several student assistants would be responsible for delivering the goods to each group.
The University has donated storage space beneath Memorial stadium and also has promised the use of a truck at cost. A five per cent operations charge, collected each month, would be used to pay for the truck. Any surplus funds would be distributed at the end of each year on a pro-rata basis.
Each member of the association would pay a $50 deposit upon entering the association. If at any time the member should wish to withdraw, the deposit would be returned in full on 45-day notice.
sity as an example of the success of such plans. The cooperative there purchases everything used by its more than 6,000 participants, from mops to milk, and saves 10 to 13 per cent on its $800,000 yearly volume. Oregon State college and the University of Texas have been equally successful with similar plans. Wimsat said.
He continued by explaining that the tax angle is averted since the association is "non-profit, non-stock, and has voluntary membership." The $50 deposit is necessary only because Kansas law requires it, Wimsatt said.
Chief obstacles which the plan must overcome, if the meeting is any indication, spring from a great amount of skepticism on the part of those who would be the purchasing agents. The plan does make necessary large single orders, expected to be difficult, and thus presents a problem of storage in the member house. Some said flatly, but without reason, that they didn't see how the plan would save them money.
According to Wimsatt, "There is absolutely no risk. The $50 is safe, and you buy only what you want. You can't lose, you can only gain."
The plan was first aired at a meeting of presidents and house-mothers of Greek houses. Wimsatt and White explained that they planned to start with canned goods only, and gradually branch out as they become familiar with the system.
Wimsatt cited Ohio State univer-
"But there is no possible way to lose money, except through unwise individual purchasing, so why not give it a try." Wimsatt countered.
As yet, no subscriptions have been sought, since the embryo association must overcome various objections, and have only 15 or 20 participating with only 15 or 20 participating.
"Of course, the more purchased at one time, the cheaper it becomes," he added.
J. Frank Dobie, a leading authority on culture of the Southwest combined amusement and philosophy in his discussion on the importance of the coyote as a mythical figure in the Southwest.
By tall tales and some not so tall,
Mr. Dobie presented his views on
relationship of nature and man.
"Most folk stories can be traced all over the world. The fox in Europe and Asia has all the stories fixed to him that the coyote has in America."
According to the Mexicans, who love to tell coyote stories, the coyote is next to God in smartness, said Mr. Dobie. "No one cares to make a fool of a fool, for it's more fun to make a fool of a smart alec."
Facts of anything can be comprehended with imagination on the subject, he contended. "These tales could have happened in the same way fairy tales could have happened."
"The coyote has been able to adapt himself to the coming of civilization." Every state west of the Mississippi, and most of the states on the east side are inhabited by them, he stated.
The area of the coyote's habitat is dry desert, and when they begin talking after daylight rain is in the offing, explained Mr. Dobie. Although this superstition is for the most part improbable, people "listen to the voice of hope." "Perhaps this is the reason we elect the people we do every two years," he continued.
The coyote has merely accepted evolution as inevitable, said Mr. Dobie. "It takes more wisdom to meet change than to make it."
In addition to several other books, Mr. Dobie wrote "The Voice of the Coyote."
Lab To Produce Ex-Student's Play
Several years ago Russell Culver, '26, wrote a play entitled "Heavens" as part of his work in Prof. Allen Crafton's playwriting course.
This same play will be one of the three productions to be given in the next lab series presentation Feb. 20, 21, and 22 in the Little Theater in Green hall.
Eugene Walling, college junior,
will direct the play. The cast includes Mary Siebert and William
Thompson, college freshmen; Mark
Gilman, college sophomore, and
Barbara Donovan, college senior.
Gerhard Herm, special student, will direct "At the Shrine," which has as its cast Mary Beth Moore, college junior, and Tom Shay, instructor of speech. Mr. Shay is director of the lab theater.
The other plays will be "At the Shrine" by Stark Young and "Fame and the Poet," by Lord Dunsany.
Phyllis Clegg, graduate student, will direct "Fame and the Poet." Its cast includes Jo Anna March, college sophomore; James York, fine arts sophomore, and James Wallace, fine arts freshman.
Professor Of Art To Give Lecture On Navajo Painting
Raymond J. Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, will speak on "The Ceremonial Sandpaintings of the Navajo Indians" at 8 p.m., today in the Museum of Art lecture room.
Slides will be shown of religious healing ceremonies of the Navajo, the largest Indian tribe today. The lecture, sponsored by Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, will be open to the public.
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1952 Letters
Daily Kansan Editorials
Heart Disease: Killer
One of the most important money-raising drives, the annual campaign of the American Heart association, is in progress.
Things of this type too often are taken for granted, but any ailment as serious as heart disease must be recognized as a vicious killer.
In 1950 heart disease was the leading cause of death in the United States—750,000 deaths were due to diseases of the heart and blood vessels. This was almost twice the total number of deaths caused by the next five top killers—cancer, accidents, pneumonia, tuberculosis and nephritis.
Three-fourths of the money raised through the Kansas Heart Fund drive will remain in the state, and the same is true for other states. One-half the remaining amount will be used for research. The national goal is eight million dollars. If that much is raised six million of it will remain in the states. Of the remaining two million which will go to the national Heart association, one million dollars will go into research.
Last year $21,000 was received, yet the University of Kansas Medical Center received grants totaling $24,000 for research in heart disease. That word is the key to the whole problem; research.
Ten years ago when a baby was born with a defective heart it faced almost certain death. Now, new surgical techniques have been developed which not only save the lives of those "blue babies," but help them toward a healthy and useful life.
Almost every day the newspapers carry stories of men and women dropping dead from heart attacks. A good share of these could be prevented by abstinence from too-strenuous activity. Studies are being carried out which can gauge the amount of work a person with a weak heart can do without risking his health, and life.
For years rheumatic fever has been the greatest enemy of children. Those lucky enough to survive its attacks have been plagued by serious after-effects. New hormones and various treatments have been developed which help to minimize the effects of rheumatic fever.
Even housewives have received their share of aid in the form of time and energy-saving techniques developed to help them protect their hearts.
All these developments are results of research—any others also must come through research. That research takes a lot of money, all of which must be raised through donations.
Every year we spend billions of dollars for military protection, and millions of dollars for protection from criminals. Heart disease can kill as fast as any bullet, or cripple as completely as any shell fragment. We need protection from a killer as deadly as that, and we can get it by investing in the Heart fund. —J.W.Z.
The Honor System On Trial
The Park Stylus, Park college, (Mo.), took a long look at its school's honor system recently and came up with some cogent comments.
But, "The Stylus is impatient with the faculty member who openly regards the honor system as a passing fad. It is perhaps more impatient with those faculty members who profess to believe in the honor system and yet show by every action that they do not.
"The Stylus is angered beyond words to find that a student having knowledge of violation of the honor system has refused to report the violator and not only prevented punishment of the violator, but escaped with impunity himself."
The editorial decided that the honor system at Park "is operated by too few students compared to faculty. It covers too few classes. It covers too few phases of life on a campus pledged to development of 'the whole man.'"
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room
KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU.376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn, Inland Daily Press Assn,
Association of Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, New York City.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahn
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman
Joe Lassiter, Jim Poweri
City Editor ... Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newmar
Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
Telegraph Editor ... Charles Burst
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Max Thompson
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Assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Pauline Patterson
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Mail subscription rates; $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence), Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods, Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Simple Plan Given For ASC Ailments
Dear Sirs:
I am writing in regard to your recent editorial concerning the apathy of certain ASC members.
It is inconceivable that anyone who actually witnessed or participated in last spring's bitter election would desire to have a repetition of it this year or in any succeeding years. It would seem that the low level "personality assassinations" indulged in by many partisans have no place in such an enlightenend environment as Mt. Oread.
The plan for reorganization of the student government in its broad general outline is basically simple. Instead of the present representation by divisions cognizance would be given to student residential affiliations. In its simplest form Greeks would compete against Greeks for council seats, as would Independents. Candidates for the ASC presidency, members of the ASC, would be elected by the student body as a whole.
The advantages of this plan would be that cathroth political contests between Greeks and Independents for council seats would not develop. Members elected in this manner would be more objective in their approach to campus problems.
It is my opinion that the administration plans to grant the All Student Council considerable autonomy in the management of student affairs, if and only if, students adopt a new plan, which opens the path to responsible student government.
Loy Kirkpatrick College junior
Comments ...
Cheaters Classified. . .
Ten years ago a student council committee at Albion college (Mich.), made a study of student cheating. This year a new committee is in the process of enlarging on this study. Here were some points made by the first committee:
Students who cheat may be divided into five types:
1. Those who cheat only in desperation.
2. Those who cheat only occasionally, and are conscience-stricken while doing so.
3. Students who cheat while not believing in it, and excuse themselves by saying the tests were unfair or they were too busy with worthy extra-curricular activities.
4. Students who boast of new cheating methods they have devised.
This last group includes those who feel cheating is unethical, those who can get good marks without cheating, and those who feel cheating is just too much of both.
5. Students who never cheat.
Editors of the Miami Hurricane, noting the similarity between their newspaper's masthead and that of the Rollin college Sandspur (both Florida college papers) wrote the Sandspur editors pointing out the coincidence.
"Coincidence, Hell!" was the reply from Rollins. "It was a case of theft." The Sandspur editors explained that for the eighth straight year the Hurricane has carried off an All-American rating from the Associate Collegiate Press, "and is, undoubtedly headed for another."
"We're gunning for an 'All-
American,'" said the Sandspur.
KEN COLLINS
"Ha, ha. . . No, Miss Faddle, this is a dressmaker's dummy for art class."
Gen. Gruenther: Only Man Who Could Take Ike's Place
There are four men who could replace Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower as Supreme Allied Commander of Western Europe. There is only one man who could take his place.
Before "Ike" can become a candidate for president, President Truman will have to release him from his assignment in Western Europe. General Eisenhower's popularity and influence in Europe are great, and it is the observation of many that the success of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's military program has come about on account of these two qualities. It is only too apparent from this that the man who replaces Eisenhower will have a lot to live up to. He must be a man who is now "Ike's" right hand.
Such a man is Gen. Alfred Maximilian Gruenther, Chief of Staff of Supreme Pact Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Forces. As one of the Big Three of the Atlantic Pact nations' supreme headquarters, he, above anyone else, is an extension of 'ke's" mind.
General Gruenther handles all problems which comes to General Eisenhower's desk during his absence. He is, besides a military brain, a mathematician, physicist, diplomat and industrialist. During World War II he was "Ike's" planning genius. And, with General Eisenhower, he planned the birth of the NATO. Above all, he regards himself as a member of an integrated staff whose job it is to develop plans for the common good of the NATO nations.
When a surgeon is operating and he is suddenly called away, there must not only be another surgeon to continue where he left off, but one who has been standing by and who is intimately familiar with the entire operation. Alfred Gruenther has been standing and the patient certainly would not die if placed in his hands.
General Gruenther is not Dwight D. Eisenhower, but Eisenhower alone did not accomplish all. Field Marshal Montgomery, Gen. Omar Bradley, William Henry Draper jr., new head man in Europe of the Mutual Security Agency, or Matt Ridgway could take over now, if circumstances called for a change in the status of the Supreme Allied Commander. But the fact remains that it was Eisenhower's philosophy which gave the needed strength to the organization, and Gruenther shares that philosophy. He is as convinced as "Ike" that the NATO can be a success by practicing the doctrine of common responsibility and common sacrifice.
—Dianne Stonebraker.
News From Other Campuses
A synthesis course to create an awareness of the major problems which now confront mankind is being offered to University of New Hampshire liberal arts seniors this year. The course is designed to assemble graduating students to graduate such knowledge as he has acquired, to enrich his personal life, and to develop his personal philosophy.
A new student curriculum committee has been formed at Purdue university. This group, in cooperation with the head of the school and other advisors will give opinions on various course evaluations, including texts, methods of presentation, and suggested curriculum changes.
After a successful trial period of one year, the Smith college student bank has embarked on its second year with many of its methods and
aims more clearly established. This organization was set up last year to aid the treasurers of various clubs on campus. At present there are between fifty and sixty organizations under the student bank system.
Students at Yale university made an unsuccessful attempt recently to institute setups at college dances. They pointed out that "the duty of Yale is to give a social as well as an academic education to its students."
Snapped the dean: "If we need liquor to sustain the college system, then we had better abandon the college system."
MacAlester College, Minnesota,
students have added a new twist to
their annual Sadie Hawkins dance.
Minimum cost per couple is 50
cents, plus a penny for every inch of
the boy's waist.
University Daily Kansan
PAGE 3
3
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Democracy Today, a new lecture and forum course, held its second meeting this afternoon. The course, offered this semester for the first time by the political science department, consists of a Lecture on Tuesdays and a discussion period on Thursdays. The class meets at 2 p.m.
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The course has a different lecturer each week and the class periods are alternately lecture and discussion. It is designed to give students an insight into problems facing democratic government today.
Students not enrolled in the course may attend both lectures and discussions if they desire.
The moderator of today's discussion was Hilden Gibson, professor of political science and human relations. John B. George of the Institute of International Education was the guest speaker.
"Usually such courses consist entirely of lectures," Mr. Gibson said. "However the department felt that such a class did not fill the bill. There is a need, not only for an intellectual understanding of democracy, but for a commitment to democracy, which a student must achieve by himself. We feel that the combination of a lecture and a sum best fills this need."
Rules For Parking Made Available
If you ride a motorcycle to school, park it behind Bailey Chemical laboratories.
That's one of the rules in the booklet outlining the traffic rules and parking regulations for the University. The booklet is available at the traffic office in Robinson
The booklets offer a quick way to get acquainted with the traffic rules and regulations. Some least known rules are important.
A student who feels that he hasn't been treated fairly may appeal his ticket to the student court, if he makes his appeal within 10 days after the time the ticket was issued. A student with an unpaid fine will not be allowed to enroll the following semester.
The campus police are authorized remove a car from the street if it is parked in violation of an ordinance. The driver will have to pay any storage charges which are assessed.
Parking permits are issued by the traffic department for parking in the various zones on the campus. There are 13 zones, but each permit is good only in the zone for which it was issued.
Don't Delay
Any Longer . . .
Space is still available on several good travel plans to Europe for summer vacation.
But record advanced bookings for trans-Atlantic transportation is completely filling all air and ship tours. Don't delay your reservations any longer. See Downs today for your trip arrangements. No service charge. No booking fee.
W. E. Sandelius, professor of political science, began the series of lectures Feb. 5. Eldon Fields associate professor of political science, will speak Tuesday, Feb. 19, and E. O. Stene, professor of political science, will speak Tuesday, March 4.
Other speakers will be Albert Ravenholt, former war correspondent now with the Institute of Current World Affairs; Leland Pritchard, professor of economics; A. H. Turney, professor of education; John Ise, professor of economics; Edward Grier, assistant professor of English; Rhoten Smith, instructor of political science; and Herman B. Chishin professor of political science
Phone 3661
Open Evenings
Mrs. Lois Odaffer
Mr. Joe Brown
downs
travel service
1015½ massachusetts st.
lawrence, kansas
aowns
travel service
1015, massachusetts st.
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In addition to these speakers, there will be several visiting lecturers and foreign students of the University who will speak to the class.
Ten Musicians Attend Meeting
The convention of the Kansas Music Teachers association at Lindsborg Monday and Tuesday was attended by several members of the University faculty.
Among those attending were: Gerald Carney, associate professor of music education, who is president of the association; Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts, a member of the board of directors; Dr. Donald M. Swarthout, professor of piano, chairman of the piano forum, and Marcus Hahn, instructor in music education, who will act as chairman of the woodwind and brass panel.
Other faculty members attending include; Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, chairman of the department of music education; Professors Joseph F. Wilkins and Reinhold Schmidt of the department of voice; Professor L. E. Anderson, of the department of organ and theory; Mrs. Janet Turk, instructor of piano, and Raymond Zepp, instructor of wood-winds.
One Dollar Goes A Long Way As Heart Fund Contribution
If you have wondered where the money goes that is contributed to a Heart fund, here is a breakdown on how one donated dollar is utilized.
The American Heart association gets 25 cents as its share. Of this, 12 and one-half cents is pledged to research. The other 12 and one-half cents is used for publications, administration, and so forth.
The Kansas Heart association, whose headquarters is in Topeka, retains 75 cents. Part of this amount is used by the Kansas Heart and Emporia Regional Heart associations to maintain a special clinic in Emporia.
The money is also used to purchase films and other educational aids for the use of any Kansan, to bring to the doctors information on the latest practices in heart disease control, to help the public learn more about "living with its heart" through the distribution of educational materials and to co-operate with other agencies in helping improve the general health of Kansas. When you give to the Heart fund you help your nation, your state, your community, your neighbor and yourself.
The lieutenant-governor of Ontario takes precedence over those of other provinces in respect to federal ceremonies and occasions.
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THE DU PONT DIGEST
M K 207
Ch.E's at Du Pont
The fields of research and development invite ingenuity of the chemical engineer
Research and development work in chemical engineering often overlap at Du Pont, except where the research is fundamental.
The chemical engineer occupied with fundamental research is chiefly concerned with basic studies of unit operations and processes involving reaction kinetics, thermodynamic properties of fluids, high-pressure techniques, equilibrium studies, heat transfer and the like. Such studies often lead to lower-cost manufacturing processes. Some recent projects in fundamental research have been:
Apart from the chemical engineers engaged in fundamental research,
2. Studies of the fundamental transfer relations between phases, for instance, gas and liquid, in reacting materials.
1. A study of fluidized catalyst reaction units including degree of fluidation, temperature uniformity, catalyst activity and life, and conversion of feed gases.
there are many groups working in applied research and development. In fact, this is the major part of the chemical engineering work done at Du Pont. Here are examples of the literally hundreds of unusual problems they have solved:
2. Developing a high-pressure liquid-phase process to replace the standard dry method of producing sodium azide formerly employed.
1. Designing equipment for producing pure silicon at 1000 $ ^{\circ} \mathrm{C} $ . (Though one of the starting compounds is highly corrosive, only spectroscopic traces of impurities can be tolerated.)
These examples can only hint the variety and originality of problems
4. Developing, from laboratory research results, a process for large-scale production of complex polymeric materials used in the manufacture of color photographic film.
3. Designing a continuous flow, gasliquid reactor for use in making a fiber intermediate under pressure.
SEEKING new ways to coat plastic on wire; Carl Hellman, B.S.C.H., Syracuse '50; and J.M. McKelvey, P.D.C.H., Washington '50.
[ SECOND OF A SERIES ]
constantly arising at Du Pont. They indicate the challenge as well as the broad opportunity awaiting the talents and ingenuity of the young chemical engineer who wants a career in research and development.
NEXT MONTH — The chemical engineer's role in plant operation at Du Pont will be discussed in the third article in this series. Watch for it!
SEND FOR your copy of "The Du Pont Company and the College Graduate." Describes opportunities for men and women with many types of training. Address: 2521 Nemours Bldg., Wilmington, Delaware.
DUPONT
REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING
...THROUGH CHEMISTRY
Entertaining, informative — listen to "Cavalcade of America," Tuesday Nights, NBC Coast to Coast
T
MEASURING pore-size distribution of porous media used in filtration; Harold P. Grace, B.S.C.H. Ch., Univ. of Pennsylvania '41; and Nym K. Seward, B.S.C.H. Lehigh U.'47.
BETWEEN HIS HEAD AND HIS FACE
INSPECTING a new type of high-pressure reactor: Robert J. Stewart, B.S.B.Ch.E., Reinscheider Polytechnic Institute '50; and Henry Smithies, M.S.C.H.ee., University of Michigan '50.
TABLE
**STUDYING plate in stainless-steel tower used to determine efficiency of designs:** C. M. Gamel, J., S.M. Ch.E., M.I.T. '48; and J. B. Jones, M.S.C.H.e., University of Michigan '46.
PAGE 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1952
Final Playoff Begins In Intramural Basketball
By BOB WOHLMAN
Large crowds and rough play were the order of the day in the first round of the intramural basketball playoffs Monday.
Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta,
Kappa Sigma and Delta Upsilon
came out with the laurels in the
fraternity "A" playoffs at Robinson
annex.
Beta Theta Pi completely overpowered Sigma Chi 47-19 in the curtain raiser at 5 p.m.
Mark Rivard and Hal Cleavinger paced Beta to victory with 12 and 11 points respectively.
Phi Delta Theta broke a close game wide open in the final quarter to defeat Sigma Nu 37-26. Phi Delta had led 18-11 at the half, but Sigma Nu made the game close. The Phi Delt power was too strong for Sigma Nu in the final minutes.
Henry Buchanan led the Phi Delt offensive with 13 points. Jerry Ivy was high point man for Sigma Nu with 12 points.
In what was probably the roughest game of the night, Kappa Sigma defeated Alpha Tau Omega 35-24. Kappa Sigma's slow possession basketball was just too strong for the fast-breaking ATO boys. Duane Unruh topped all scorers with 19 points to pace the Kappa Sigma attack. Merlin Gish scored 10 points for ATO's losing cause.
In the most thrilling game of the night Delta Upsilon had their hands full, but they had enough power to edge out a 25-24 decision over Phi Kappa Psi.
A set shot from the corner by Dick LaGree of DU, with a minute and 45 seconds remaining, provided the margin of victory, but it took a minute and a half to preserve it. Ron Mercer of the losing Phi Psi was the only man in the game to score in double figures. He scored 11 points on two goals and seven foul shots.
In the fraternity "B" playoffs, Delta Upsilon, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Delta Theta, and Beta Theta Pi
survived the first round of play.
Delta Upsilon, paced by the one-two scoring punch of Merle Hodges and George Michale was led to an impressive 49-35 victory. Hodges scored 20 points on six goals and eight fouls, and Michale totalled 17 on seven goals and three foul conversions.
Phi Gamma Delta ran up the highest score of the night when they completely overwhelmed a hapless Delta Tau Delta five 76-21.
Ben Dalton led the Phi Gamma attack with 23 points. He also had some scoring assistance by Monty Walker. They had 17 and 15 points respectively.
Phi Delta Theta broke a close game wide open in the final quarter as they scored a 36-23 decision over Sigma Chi.
Burwell Shepard paced the Phi Delts with 20 points on 9 field goals and two foul shots. Dan Dibble had 11 points for Sigma Chi's losing cause.
Beta Theta Pi crushed Kappa Sigma 57-24 in a game which turned into a near riot at the end.
十
Albert Mulliken led Beta Theta Pi with 20 points on four field goals and 12 out of 13 charity heaves.
Two games were played in the Independent "B" class.
Jolliffe defeated Navy 52-39 in a racehorse basketball game, and Roger Williams defeated Phi Chi 52-24.
In the Navy game, Don McCoy and Dick Cummings capped the Jolliffe squad with 14 and 10 points respectively, but it was Navy's Jim Gillett who gained scoring laurels with 15 points.
Roger Williams defeated Phi Chi 52-24 in the final game of the evening, Phi Chi, who was a last minute replacement for Oread, was no match for the accurate shooting of Roger Williams.
The winners' well balanced scoring machine showed the following results. Don Ament 16, Gary Glasscock 14, Tom Smith 11, and Howard Stringham 11.
New Leaders In Southwest And Southern Races
New York—(U.P).A pair of upsets gave the Southwest conference and the Southern conference new leaders today as the basketball races in all sections of the nation began to heat up.
West Virginia was elevated to the top spot in the Southern loop when North Carolina State, which had been first, suffered a 71 to 58 back-set last night at the hands of Duke. And Texas Christian took in the Southwest's Texans suffered a stunning loss to Baylor, 71-59.
Other results last night saw independent Dayton strengthen its bid for a tournament berth by shading Bowling Green, 70-68, and highly-ranked Oklahoma City upset by Siena, 55-50.
For North Carolina State, which was ranked 16th nationally by the United Press board of coaches, last night's loss to Duke was the eighth in 24 games—the second in 11 conference games. West Virginia which defeated Richmond on Monday night, has a 9-1 conference record.
Last night's upset gave Duke revenge for a 72-70 loss to N.C. State earlier this season.
Texas Christian ran its Southwest conference record to 6-1 last night by rolling over Rice, 83 to 49. George McLeod hit for 20 points, Johnny Earle scored by Hyvne Hornne for 14 to pace the easy Horned Frog triumph.
Meanwhile, Texas bowed to Baylor—which now has won only four out of 20 games. The favored Long-horns trailed in every period of the game at Waco, Texas, and were sunk when three key men fouled out in the third period. Ralph Johnson's 22 points led Baylor. The loss dropped Texas' league record to six wins and two losses.
Oklahoma City, ranked No. 17 nationally, saw its record slump to 14-4 with the loss to Siena, which now has a 16-3 record.
Tri-Delt's Victors In Women's Basketball
By JACKIE JONES
Foster hall and Delta Delta Delta took the first round of women's intramural basketball playoffs with impressive victories
Foster rolled to a 46 to 18 victory over the Freshman AA squad and the tri-Delts came through with a 46 to 18 win over Sigma Kappa.
In action tonight, Foster will meet Kappa Alpha Theta and the tri-Delts will face the Jayettes in the semi-final matches.
Sigma Kappa was unable to put up a strong scoring offensive, and the sharp shooting of Pat Garrett of the tri-Delts was too much for their defense. The little forward dumped in 32 points.
Marian Miller led the Sigma Kappa scoring with 12, Vernie Theden had 2 and Patricia Hessling scored 2.
Chloe Warner scored 2 points for the winners and Mary Marhoffer scored 10. The tri-Delt defense was Joan Carter, Virginia Loveless and Sue Quinn.
At the half, the Sigma Kappas trailed 15 to 6 and in the second period the tri-Delts stretched it to 44 to 16.
Foster hall showed its usual scoring power in winning over the freshmen. Their offense, which is the best in intramurals, was too much for the freshmen guards.
The scoring for the winners was led by Shirley Mickelson with 19, Ernestine Dehlinger had 18 and Anita Philipp had 9.
Virginia Brooks, Jappy Rau, Mar-
Peterson, Emily Smith,
x660 for the FOPker, six
The Foster defense held the AA's to 18 points, two more than Sigma Kappa scored against the tri-Delts.
Mary DeMeritt led the scoring for the AA's with 11 points, Judy Timmins had 4 and Janice Stone scored 3.
Gracie Harris, Marlene Gray and Betty McCoy were the starting guards for the freshmen.
Both Delta Delta Delta and Foster should give their opponents plenty of opposition in the action tonight, and either team might go on to win the Hill championship.
Sammy Snead Needs Money
Miami, Fla. — (U.P.) — Slammin'
Sammy Snead was moanin' the money blues today as he prepared for a swift return to the golf tournament trail.
The man who reportedly has more money buried in tomato cans than there is in Fort Knox recently decided to build himself a house in Coral Gables, and to hear Sam tell it his new shanty cost more than a diamond-studded cost of the Tai Mahal.
"Ive got to get back to work," complained the man who came out of the Virginia Hills with little more stylish swing and unconfined bunions.
It was quite a parlay. Maybe he isn't a first cousin of Captain John Smith, but the slammer soon became known as an "FFV." Usually that stands for "First Family of Virginia." In his case it meant "First Financier of Virginia." Nor was Samuel Jackson exactly prodigial with his pennies. But to hear Sam 'ell of his current house-building troubles, he's down to his last few kopeks.
"I came down here from West Virginia and all I wanted to do was build me a little old house for about $20,000," Sam wailed. "Well, the contract called for $41,500 and so far the danged thing has cost me $60,000."
"Man, I ain't got that kind of money," he insisted.
That last part may cause a chuckle among his fairway constituents. For, while the slammer doesn't live up to their theory that he makes a copper Indian squeal, old Jackson can keep a right tight squeeze on Uncle Sam's lovely green bond, any denomination.
Sweetheart Swing
No admission charge Music by the Collegians
Saturday, February 16,
After The Nebraska Game
Main Lounge of the Union 9-12
XY
Tattoo Tattoos
f the es.
minin' the paired tour-
more than
dece in
tell than
the
"work."
out
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Sam
ding
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Kansas To Ninth In Latest Ap Rating
The Kansas Jayhawks dropped to ninth place in the national basketball ratings, according to the results of the latest Associated Press basketball poll.
Coach F. C. Phog Allen's cage crew slipped from sixth to ninth place after gaining only a narrow margin of victory over Colorado last week.
The top spot again went to the Kentucky Wildcats, who have already won the Southeastern conference championship. This is the fourth week that Adolph Rupp's quintet have held the number one position.
The Kansas State Wildcats, present leaders in the Big Seven conference race, were second with fourteen first-place votes and 737 points.
The top ten teams in this week's ratings are the same as those of last week, but the order of their selection has been considerably altered.
Kentucky drew forty-two first place votes and 867 points from the 103 sports writers and sportcasters who participated in the poll.
Duquesne, only major unbeaten team in the nation, moved from the fifth spot to third place, less than 100 points behind Kansas State.
The Dukes stretched their winning streak to seventen games by edging previously unbeaten St. Bonaventure Monday. 69-63.
Iowa (15-1) made the biggest gain
with a jump from ninth to fifth, while another Big Ten school, Illinois, fell from the third position to sixth.
St. Louis held in seventh place, Washington eighth and St. John's of Brooklyn tenth, with the Jayhawks in ninth.
The United Press ratings gave Kentucky first and Kansas State second, but stuck with Illinois in the third position.
The Kansas squad was rated eighth, one place ahead of Washington.
The top ten in the Associated Press ratings (first place votes in parentheses):
1. Kentucky (42) 867
2. Kansas State (14) 73
3. Duquesne (4) 667
4. St. Bonaventure (12) 563
5. Iowa (4) 473
6. Illinois (1) 443
7. St. Louis (3) 397
8. Washington (5) 269
9. Kansas (2) 256
10. St. John's 161
Three Texas towns, Pharr, San Juan and Alamo, are so close together they are connected by sidewalks and use the same high school.
Weavers
901 Mass.
Two for
your honey...
Remember Your Valentine, Tomorrow.
Weaver's
901 Mass.
Two for your honey...
Cologne Duette by Fabergé
her two favorite fashion fragrances in a golden gift box, 2.50 the set
Ravage Ravage
DRUEL
Weaver's Cosmetics—Main Floor plus 12
*plus tax
Cage Scores
Canisius 83, Buffalo 77
Boston College 86, Brandeis 49
Holy Cross 72, Connecticut 53
Yale 81, Dartmouth 57
Siena 55, Oklahoma City U. 50
Springfield (Mass.) 66, Norwich 61
Manhattan 72, CCNY 54
Duke 71, N. Carolina State 58
Franklin & Marshall 79, Navy 76
Georgetown (DC) 96, Catholic U. 52
Western Kentucky 87, Marshall 82
N. Carolina 75, S. Carolina 68
Baltimore U. 79, Tuse S. Teach. 38
Charleston 54, Armstrong Col. 53
Stetson 70, Rolling 68
Loyola (Md) 65, Morgan State 63
Indiana Central 65, Anderson 64
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1952 University Daily Kansan
WAA To Hold Party In Robinson Gym
The Women's Athletic association will hold a meeting at 4 p.m. Thursday in Robinson gym.
There will be a regular business meeting, plus a Valentine party.
All members are requested to attend.
Augustana (S.D.) 64, Omaha U. 60
Dayton 70, Bowling Green 68
Concordia (Minn.) 76, Moorhead
(Minn.) 50
Findlay 89, Willmington College 77
Houston 54, Wichita 53
PHOTOS COPIED
wallet or application size photos
20 wallet size $1.00
deluxe print
original picture returned send any size photo or negative
p. o. box 2448, Kansas City 6, Mo.
FEDERAL WALLET SIZE PHOTO CO.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No. 33...THE SHEEP
"They can't pull the wool over my eyes!"
They tried to fool him with the "quick-trick" cigarette mildness tests—but he wouldn't go astray! We know as well as he there's only one fair way to test cigarette mildness. And millions of smokers agree!
It's the sensible test...the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke, on a day-after-day pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments. Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone (T for Throat,T for Taste),you'll see why...
CAMEL
TURKISH & DOMESTIC
BLAND
CIGARETTES
CHOICE QUALITY
After all the Mildness Tests . . .
Camel leads all other brands by billions
B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
PAGE 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1952
Today's Politician Should Focus His Appeal On Women Over 21
Bv PAULYNE PATTERSON
If women in the United States banded together and voted the same way, they could control every national election. The ballot campaigner cannot afford to overlook the power of women at the polls because today women constitute a dominant national group.
Statistics recently released by the census bureau reveal the number of residents living on the edge of 21 is about 49,600,000. Men over 21 total about 47,900,000.
Women were granted the right to vote by the nineteenth amendment which was proclaimed in effect Aug. 26, 1920. In the last decade the number of women above the voting age has increased substantially more than the total of men in the same age groups.
Of all the states, only in Rhode Island was the increase of males proportionately greater than females in 1940. Nationally, women are dominant in every age group above the voting age. In 15 states, however, most of them in the West, men still maintain a numerical superiority.
Since women outnumber the men, are we likely to have a woman nominated for president or vicepresident? Certainly not this year, but the time may not be too far distant.
Mrs. India Edwards, vice-chairman of the Democratic national committee, said recently that it is likely a woman will be nominated vice-president within the next few election years. If women continue to outnumber the men among voting ages, the wise party leaders may consider it expeditious to place a woman on the ballot.
Official Bulletin
W. A.A. business meeting and Valentine party, 4 p.m. Thursday, Robinson gym. Bring dues.
Hiliel meeting, 7:30 tonight, Community Building. Election of officers and refreshments.
ISA Council meeting, 5 today. Miller hall. All representatives should be present.
YMCA all-membership meeting, 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Myers Hall Chapel. Dr. Patton will talk on experiences as chaplain in U. S. Air Force.
Jay Janes, 5 today, Pine room, Union. Do not wear uniform—picture will not be taken.
CQ-KU amateur radio club, code practice, 7:30 tonight, E. e.l. lab. All interested in getting a "home license" invited.
Math club, 5 p.m. Thursday, 203
Strong, Irwin Gaston, speaker.
No regular Red Pepper meeting this week. Pictures will not be taken.
Meeting for new members of Red
Miss Horn Engaged To Richard Docking
Mrs. Thomas H. Horn, Goodland, announces the engagement of her daughter, Marcia Ewin, to George Derrick, and Mrs. George Docking, Lawrence
Miss Horn is a journalism senior and a member of Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Docking is a business senior member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
Locksley Hall Holds Election For Spring Semester Officers.
Donna Lee Cromack, college senior, recently was elected president of Locksley hall for the spring semester.
Other officers elected were Gerraud Kaps, vice-president; Linda Stormont, secretary; Mary Pretz, treasurer; Janet Stewart, house manager; Luella Schmalzried, social chairman, and Suzanne Berry, AWS representative.
Peppers, 5 p.m. Thursday, 110 Fraser.
HAJAS meeting, 105 Military Science building, 7:15 tonight. All basic AFROTIC invited to discuss future policy and social functions.
Holy Communion for Episcopal students, Thursday 7 a.m., Danforth Chapel. Breakfast in Union.
KU Young Republican club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 106 Green. Speaker, Rep. Charles D. Stough. Election of officers.
Chess club, 7:15 tonight, 111 Strong.
FACTS meeting, 7:30 tonight, 210 Fraser. To fill ASC vacancies. All welcome.
Socialist Study club, 8 tonight,
104 Green hall. Dr. A. Chakravarty
introducing a discussion on the
foundations of socialism.
Stateswomen club, 4-5:30 today,
200 Strong hall, bring dues.
Hour Dance, 7-8 tonight, Monchonsia hall.
History club, 7 tonight, Pine room, Union. Election and speaker. John D. George, visiting representative Institute of Current World Affairs.
Psychology club, 7:30 Thursday,
9 Strong hall. Business meeting,
all psych students and faculty urged
to attend.
Home Ec. club, 4 today, 114 Fraser, stuffed animals will be completed. Everyone attend.
Outstanding Studies In Portraiture
C
Dinner-Bridge Given By Faculty Club
MARCIA HORN
The Faculty club entertained with a dinner bridge Friday night. Boots and hostesses were Mr. and Mrs. James K. Hitt, Mr. and Mrs. Marston McCluggage and Mr. and Mrs. Allen Reese.
YEARLY
SCHOOL
CAMPUS
The patriotic theme was carried out in the decorations, which included a miniature log cabin. Those who won prizes were: Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Bracken; Ms. Linda Beasley, mer. Mrs. Fred S. Montgomery, J. D. Stranathan and J. D. Hevinger.
The Faculty club entertained wit
sorority and fraternity panels at special rates
50% discount on all reorders by one of Kansas City's leading portrait studios.
Victor Berline of Paris
JE-6113 3438½ Broadway, Kansas City, Md
We are equipped to take sittings on campus at a pre-arranged time. Please contact us.
Exclusive Photographer for Kansas City Resident Theatre
Thursday evening the club held a square dance at the clubhouse. The hosts were Mr. and Mrs. T. DeWitt and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shenk.
Chi Chi Chi Fraternity Elects Gene Brunson President
Gene Brunson, engineering junior, recently was elected president of Chi Chi Chi fraternity for the spring semester.
Other officers elected are Gerald Tibbs, vice-president; John Handrahan, secretary; Leon Lee, treasurer; Walter Langford, social chairman; Richard Callebresi, chaplain; Lawrence Green, athletic manager, and Curtis Terflinger, alumni secretary.
New York — (U.P).— Mention continental cookery and few of us think of the Portuguese method of food preparation.
Yet the dishes of this peninsular country are among the best in all Europe, in the opinion of a famous cookbook-writing threesome. They also are among the easiest to prepare.
The Browns say Portugal's cuisine has "oriental tongues," because in the past hordes of Moors settled along its coast and brought with them the ancient cooking arts of Arabia. You'll find stuffed cucumbers, melons, almonds and rice in dozens of the native dishes.
Everything from a Portuguese almond soup to fried cream dessert is covered in the new European cookbook by the Browns, Cora, Bob and Rose.
You'll also find cooking inflush, the Brownys say, although basically the diet of the Portuguese as "marine as that of malaria."
Portuguese Dishes Among Best In Europe
Typical of the dishes is this one of shrimps fried in batter:
ingredients
1 pound raw shrimp; salt and pepper; 2 tablespoons lemon juice; $2\frac{1}{2}$ tablespoons olive oil; 1 cup flour; 1 egg white, beaten; 1 egg yolk, beaten; deep fat for frying; minced parsley and quartered lemons.
Shell shrimp. Mix salt, pepper, lemon juice and all but 1 teaspoon olive oil. Beat and mix with shrimps. Marinate one-half hour. Make a batter with flour, egg white and yolk, 1 teaspoon oil, and enough tepid water to thin. Run toothpicks through shrimp so they are skewered together in groups of four or five. Dip groups into batter until completely covered. Fry in deep fat. Drain on absorbent paper. Sprinkle with parsley and serve with quartered lemons.
Method
Eggs, Portuguese style, are easily prepared.
Heat olive oil in a frying pan and add minced garlic. When the garlic is a delicate brown, remove with a skimmer. Add to the oil 5 or 6 thick tomato slices. Turn carefully in the hot oil so they won't lose their shape. Season well with salt and pepper and put them in
Campu WEST
Campu WEST
the famous Pendleton 49'en in striking new plaids and checks.
$17.95 and $19.95
Store hours 9 'til 5:30.
a baking plate. Using a teaspoon make little hollows in the tomatoes and drop an egg in each. Season. Place in hot oven just long enough to cook the egg whites.
Alpha Delta Pi Elects Stonebraker President
Dianne Stonebraker, journalism junior, was elected president of Alpha Delta Pi sorority Monday night for the coming year.
Chi Omega Sorority Elects Janet Morrison President
Other officers elected were Janice Perry, vice-president; June Porter, recording secretary; Barbara Findley, treasurer; Diane Wade, corresponding secretary; Billie Loflin, executive member-at-large; Marilyn Miller, chaplain; Kay Lehmann, registrar; Nancy Glenn, reporter and historian, and Howard Neuer, guard
Janet Morrison, college junior is the new president for Chi Omega sorority.
Other officers are Ann McVay, vice-president; Judy Carothers, secretary; Rosalea Osborne; Anne Jackson, pledge trainer; Janice McFarland, social chairman, and Marcia Horn. activities.
YOUR EYES
Eye
EYE
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
Comfort Convenience
JAYHAWK BROS.
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Last Times Today Cary Grant Betsy Drake 'ROOM FOR ONE MORE'
STARTS THURSDAY
HONG KONG
PORT OF A THOUSAND
DANGERS !
starring
ROYALD
REAGAN
RHONDA
FLEMING
-- NELI BRUCE
MARVIN MILLER - LONNELL GILMORE
-- DANNY CHANG -- WEL LINK
GAMED BY
TECHNICOLOR
Late News Events Sports "Paddle Your Own Canoe"
---
E
.
O
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
TONITE - THURSDAY
BUNCO
SQUAD
ROBERT STERLING · JOAN DIXON
RICARDO CORTEZ · DANTE
Co-feature
IVARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD TONITE - THURSDAY
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
TONITE - THURSDAY
BUNCO SQUAD
ROBERT STERLING • JOAN DIXON
RICARDO CORTEZ • DANTE
Co-feature
WARNER BROS.
PRESENT
GREGORY
PECK
VIRGINIA
MAYO
CAPTAIN
HORATIO
HORNBLOWER
Technicolor
RAOUL WALSH
Broadway Productions for the 1976 Broadway and Music Center and various other venues.
BUNCO SQUAD
WARNER BROS. PRESENT
GREGORY PECK
VIRGINIA MAYO
"CAPTAIN HORATIO HORNBLOWER"
Technicolor
PROD. WALSH
Broadcast for the U.S. and British and American Film Industry from E.B. & S.K.
Plus: "Candid Mike"
oon
toes
son.
ough
nt
lism
of
day
nice letter,
and-
or-
filin,
ilyn
ann,
and
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r is mega
Classified Advertising
Vay,
sec-
ck-
Far-
rcia
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be processed and received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Business office. Journalism bldg., no later than 4:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Three days
75c
2c
one day
...50c
...1c
25 words or less Additional words
TRANSPORTATION
FOUR-CAR POOL commuting to KC
daily 8-5, five days. Want 5th car. Call
Don House, Ar 4080 between 6:30 and
9 p.m. 19
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange international and international travel whether touring or traveling to filmieres. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, Downs Service. 1015 Mass. tf
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
your resort in summer. Call Miss Glesseman at
National Bank for information and res-
ervations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
Five days
$1.00
3c
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers note books, theses, medical and biologi- sports and miscellaneous. Mrs J. Roscoe 838 La Apt. 4. upstairs. Pr. 2753J.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade
pastes. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
a.m. until midnight.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and sand-wiches-for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604. 1106 Mass. tf
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuring fast, reliable service. Vermont Television. Phone 138. $26 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our goal is to help you find fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. ft
CRYSTAL TACA serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and
E GREATNESS,
THE GLORY,
THE FURY
OF THE
NORTHWEST
FRONTIER!
THE GR
TH
NO
FF
UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL presents
JAMES STEWART
ARTHUR KENNEDY
JULIA ADAMS
ROCK HUDSON
BEND OF
THE RIVER
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1952 University Daily Kansan PAGE
MID-WEST PREMIERE SHOWING SOON
Qranada
BEAT-UP 36 Plymouth marked down to $50. Goes. Sealed-beam lights. Strong engine and battery. Displayed edge drill field, west of Sunside. Call 2841R. 18
cakes. Free parking space for customers.
a mum midnight. Crystal Cake, 609 Vt.
TYPEWITER SUPPLIES! All top grade bond paper, onion skin, and carbon papers to make your typing easier. Student Union Book Store. 15
FOR SALE
BOOK-EASE IS THE collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, anywhere, or the pages of the floor in place. Now just 98c at your Student Union Book Store. 15
SPECIAL STUDENT RATES on Time,
life, and Newsweek subscriptions. Get
ours now at the Student Union Book
Store. 15
NEW SHIPMENT OF POCKET BOOKS
They buy them over
Student Union Book Store.
VACANCY for two boys. 1218 Miss.
Phone 514. 18
CLOCK, RADIO, and portable radio clearance! Nationally advertised brands print their logos to music with a clock radio. See these values at Goodrich, 929 Mass. B-1-13
RENT A TYPEWRITER NOW! Choose from our wide selection of portables. teach your grades improve when you teach your papers. Student Union Book Store.
WANTED: Girl graduate student to
work on apartment. Call 123
5 p.m. 3096W
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
men buyers. Buyers. William J. V.
AlmEN, 3110R
FOR RENT
MISCELLANEOUS
LOST
BLACK, SUEDE purse with bilfold and identification in Union cafeteria after 1 week. 8. Identification verifiable. Valuable. Call Leta Larwre at 900. No questions asked.
Gardenina Pavs Off
Tracy, Minn., (U.P)—Mrs Thomas Erickson unearthed three silver dollars while spading her garden. They were dated 1879, 1881 and 1897.
P. BOLZARO
EUROPEAN MASTERPIECE RETURNED—The war-damaged early 18th century painting of the assumption of the Virgin has been returned by this country to the monastery of Monte Cassino, Italy. It was discovered among the rubble of World War II by a German soldier and still bears the mark of the siege of Monte Cassino. The Germans took it to Austria, where it was found by the invading Americans. Our state department returned it, via the Italian consul at Munich.
No Hot Times At KU
Forty firemen from eastern Kansas towns were in Lawrence yesterday for the start of a three day school under the sponsorship of the Kansas office of civil defense, the state fire marshal's office and University extension.
Clyde Latcham, state fire marshal, and Standish Hall, state civil defense director, will be among the instructors.
TONIGHT AT 8:43 ONLY
An Extra Surprise
MAJOR STUDIO
SNEAK PREVIEW
IMPORTANT
An Advance Showing of a Major
Studio Picture That Will Be Here Soon!
THE PRODUCERS REQUEST THE TITLE WITHHELD HOWEVER WE CAN TELL YOU THIS MUCH . . . IT'LL BE ONE OF THESE 1952 TOP HITS!
PLUS REGULAR FEATURE BEFORE AND AFTER PREVIEW
BE ONE OF THESE 1952 TOP HITS!!
- "LONE STAR"
- "GIRL IN EVERY PORT"
- "LAS VEGAS STORY"
- "BEND IN THE RIVER"
- "FIXED BAYONETS"
- "BELLE OF NEW YORK"
- "QUO VADIS"
LAST TIMES TODAY - ALL PERFORMANCES OF
- "PHONE CALL FROM A STRANGER"
"MODEL & THE MARRIAGE BROKER"
Jeanne Crain — Scott Brady
FEATURES AT: "MODEL"-7:00-10:35—Sneak 8:43
Granada PHONE 946
Spokane, Wash.—(U.P.)—L e w i s Costello caught a mallard duck in front of his suburban home and called police for guidance. Their answer: "Eat it."
STARTS THURSDAY Shocking! Revealing! Timely!
TIMELY AS TODAY'S HEADLINES!
!
THE
M-G-M's
THRILLER
UNKNOWN MAN
Starring WALTER PIDGEON ANN HARDING BARRY SULLIVAN
ADDED
"MISTER Basketball"
Color Cartoon
"STOOOE FOR MOUSE"
Movietone News
It's On The Way: "QUO VADIS"
Granada
Women Students Win Scholarships
Thirteen women students have been awarded resident hall scholarships for Miller, Watkins and Sclards halls.
Watkins hall: Mary Harder and Ida Penix, fine arts sophomore and Jo Ann Garinger, College sophomore.
Sellards hall: Phyllis Ward ar-
Lessie Hinchee, College sophomore
Fanda Murray and Dorothy Wood:
Wanda Murray and Dorothy Wood:
Watkins, fine arts sophomore.
They are for Miller hall; Shirle Boatwright, fine arts; Sadako Matz-shita, College junior; Leta Larrey College and nursing junior; Virg Wine, education junior; and Magery Sereda, transfer from Wasl burn.
Phog Allen was basketball coac at Warrensburg Teachers college seven years; at Baker university tw years and at Haskell Indian institute one year. Ha has been at th University 34 years.
Now thru Thurs.
A Howl From Start To Finish . . .
YEAR
HILARIOUS
ADVENTURE!
DICK
POWELL
PEGGY
DOW
"You Never
Can Tell"
Added • Color Cartoon and News
Features • 7:38 & 9:38
FILMED AGAINST BACKGROUNDS THAT CAN NEVER BE DUPLICATED AGAIN!
STARTS
FRIDAY
UNCLE SAM'S
CLOAK-AND-
DAGGER JOES
OPEN
THE ENEMY'S
BACK DOOR
TO VICTORY!
DECISION
BEFORE
DAWN
From George Howe's
Christopher Award novel,
"Call It Treason" ... Directed by
ANATOLE LITVAK
who gave the world 'The Sokka PVI'
20TH ANNIVERSARY
New PATEE
PHONE 321
PAGE 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1952
University Benefits From Gifts To Endowment Association
BY ALAN MARSHALL
Private philanthropy plays an important part in academic life at KU. Gifts and bequests to the University Endowment association have made possible many campus improvements and are largely responsible for Kansas' forward outlook.
In a pamphlet entitled "The Role of Private Philanthropy at the University of Kansas," the association sets forth the program it sponsors.
The pamphlet states that gifts are of two kinds: specific and unrestricted. Specific gifts include scholarships, fellowships, student loans, research, buildings, equipment, and books.
Unrestricted gifts cannot be categorized, since there are no stipulations as to their use, except in a general sense. Best known, perhaps, is the Elizabeth M. Watkins trust which consists largely of western Kansas farm lands. Two campus evidences of the income, Watkins hall and Watkins Memorial hospital, are only a part of the total gift.
Scholarships and fellowships are of vital importance to the life of any university. They represent the principal means through which worthy students are assisted at the University. Such grants are possible only through philanthropic donations.
Of approximately 500 scholarships now available for undergraduate students, most important is the Summerfield grant, which makes part-time employment unnecessary. Other cash awards generally vary from $150 to $300 a year.
Scholarships in the graduate school are not nearly so numerous as at the undergraduate level. According to the Endowment association, undergraduate awards are among the greatest needs of the University.
Grants-in-aid and student loans are two of the methods of assisting needy students. The former require no level of scholastic performance other than good standing. Loans are currently being made at two and one-half per cent interest, usually not charged until after graduation.
Gifts for research are in general favor. Present tax laws encourage corporate expenditures for education and research by placing a large share of the cost of contributions on government.
Buildings are best known among
the most frequent major gifts to a university. At KU, the Spooner-Thayer museum, several classroom buildings, the Student Union, a research building, the student hospice and charitable company, and all scholarship halls were so given by friends and alumni of the University.
The association theater some day for an out-door theater on the hillside overlooking the campus from the southwest. Such a structure would be a valuable contribution to student life, it is believed.
Scientific collections, books and equipment for various phases of education are only a few ramifications of the Endowment association's efforts.
The association was chartered by the State of Kansas on Jan. 11, 1893, to encourage and administer gifts to the University of Kansas. Its membership includes 31 elected members and four ex-officio members—the governor, chief justice of the supreme court, the chancellor, and the president of the University Alumni association.
Three Women To Design Flag For Senior Class
A committee of three senior women, consisting of Betsy Thomas, Kay Peters, and Darlene Greer, has been set up to design a class flag. The seniors plan to fly this flag on any day on which the class has an important function such as class day or the day of the senior dance.
A senior will make the flag as soon as the design has been chosen.
Museum Of Art To Show Original Prints Until March
A series of old master prints will be loaned to the Museum of Art by the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City. The first set of the series may now be seen in the museum.
The set includes prints by Durer, Raimondi, Schongauer, Grun, Duvet and Hirschvogel. This set will be shown until March 4. The prints are originals, not reproductions.
Miss Banker On Honor Roll
The name of Elizabeth Ann Banker, junior in Education, was omitted from the School of Education honor roll, according to Dean George B. Smith, School of Education.
New York—(U.P.)—Newark airport was padlocked today for the duration of a congressional investigation of the three Elizabeth, N.J., plane crashes that took 118 lives within two months.
Newark Airport Padlocked Pending Probe In Congress
An agreement to keep the $23,-
000,000 installation closed was
reached Tuesday night at a six-hour
closed meeting of government and
officials and executives of 25
scheduled and non-scheduled
airlines.
Capt, Eddie Rickenbacker, "Ace of aces" in World War I and now president of Eastern airlines was named chairman of a 15-man committee to blueprint a safety program for airports built near heavily-populated areas of other cities. The Rickenbacker group meets here Friday.
The conferrees took two additional steps to protect alarmed residents living near New York's La Guardia and Idlewild International airports and prevent disasters in areas near the nation's other major airfields.
Meanwhile the death toll of the latest crash here two days ago rose to 32 today when Mrs. Sarah Aronwald, Bronx, New York, died at St. Elizabeth hospital.
Avalanches Raise Death Toll To 76
Zurich, Switzerland—(U.P.)—New Alpine avalanches today buried a skiing party, wiped out a group of 17th century mountain chalets and raised Europe's 10-day storm death toll to 76.
British skier Albert Thomas Hargreave, 44, died in an avalanche in the Austrian Alps.
News Roundup
In the Swiss Alps near Pontresina a 32-year-old mother of two children was killed when her skiing party was buried under tons of cascading snow. Mountain guards rescued the others.
San Francisco — (U.P.) — A “new phase” of the investigation into tax
Tax Investigation Opens'NewPhase
Adelanes
21
VACATION Anywhere, USA FASHION SHOW
The Duke, formerly King Edward VIII, arrived at Southampton aboard the liner Queen Mary from New York to take part in the state funeral for the King Friday.
Thursday, February 21 Jayhawker Theatre 8:00 p.m.
presents
ALSO SEE THE MOVIE "DISC JOCKEY" STARRING RUSS MORGAN - TOMMY DORSEY
London — (U.P.) The Duke of Windsor came home today to join the nation in a final tribute to King George VI, his brother and successor on the British throne.
Duke Of Windsor Returns For Rites
It will be Windsor's first official appearance in any ceremony in this country since he abdicated the
Browdy told reporters he had just completed a nationwide tour and wanted to tell the chief executive that he sensed "definite sentiment" for Mr. Truman.
ADELANE'S 823 Mass.
"Judging by his remarks, I would say he is going to run again," the Jewish leader said.
A
Washington — (U.P.)— Benjamin G. Browdy, president of the Zionist Organization of America, said at the White House today that President Obama will decide definitely "within 10 or 15 days" whether to seek re-election.
Unreliable weather conditions have caused a re-scheduling of the Army ROTC drill schedule for the next month.
Weather Conditions Force Change In Army ROTC Drill
The unit regularly drilling at 4 p.m. Wednesday has been classified into another unit, which will meet at 4 p.m. on Mondays.
office irregularities got underway today on the heels of suspended tax official John A. Malone's refusal to answer committee questions on constitutional grounds.
Two members of the King committee, buttonholed Tuesday night after concluding secret questioning of Malone and key witness Edwin M. Furtado, said today's public sessions would involve subjects hitherto undiscussed.
*Effective May 1 subject to gov't approval
Travel and study ABROAD this summer
Zion Leader Says Truman May Run
For tour information, mention countries that interest you most when you write to: John Furbay, Ph.D., Director, TWA Air World Tours, 80 E. 42nd St., New York 17 N. Y.
throne in 1936 in favor of the then Duke of York.
Eighty-four - year - old Dowager Queen Mary will not attend the funeral of her son King George VI Friday, it was announced today. She is quite well, a member of her household said, but it is felt she should not be subjected to the strain of attending the ceremony.
Spend your summer profitably and enjoyably on one of 16 four- to tenweek study tours in Great Britain, Europe, Scandinavia, Asia or Africa. Earn full credit while you travel and study. Arranged by specialists in the educational-travel field, in cooperation with TWA. Tour price takes care of all necessary expenses, including TWA's money-saving new tourist fares.*
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Daily Kansan
49th Year, No.89
FACTS Party Fills Vacant Council Seats
Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence Kravitz, engineering sophomore, and Shirley Thomson, education junior. Wednesday night were elected to fill vacancies in the All Student Council at a meeting of FACTS. campus political party.
Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952
Kravitz will represent district II (School of Engineering), and Miss Thomson will represent district II (Schools of Business, Fine Arts, Education, Pharmacy, and the Graduate school).
The FACTS primary will be held approximately two weeks before the regular ASC election, which is tentatively set for April 9.
Marc Hurt, college freshman, was named chairman of the general election committee; Melvin Cox, college sophomore, chairman of the membership committee, and William Nulton, college junior, head of the primary committee.
Staff Positions Open For Student Musical
Applications for staff positions on the College Daze student musical production are now being accepted. Positions open are staging and art, stage crew, costumes, makeup, programs, tickets, secretarial director and vocal director.
Five new officers were elected and a sixth retained for spring semester positions in the Ennis C. Whitehead squadron of the Arnold Air society last night.
Students interested should leave a letter of application at the Student Union Activities office or contact Dick Klassen, producer. Applications close at noon, Feb. 21.
4 Benches Placed Around Campanile
Four benches of pre-cast concrete have been placed around the base of the Memorial campanile.
Officers Elected By Air Society
The complete luncheon program, with Rolla A. Clymer the principal speaker, for the dedication of the new journalism building Feb. 22 was announced today by Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Rolla Clymer To Be Speaker For Dedication Luncheon
Two of the benches were given by George J. "Rook" Woodward, '17. One is in memory of his first wife, Violet Kilgore Woodward, '17, the other in honor of his daughter, Miss Martha Ellen Woodward, '45.
Clymer, veteran editor of the El Dorado Times, is one of a group of White-trained Kansas editors which the famous Emporia newspaperman called "my boys." Clymer will give a personal estimate of William Allen White from one who knew him as boy and man.
Henry J. Haskell, editor of the Kansas City Star and a longtime friend of William Allen White, will make a few remarks as will Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy.
The society, for advanced Air Force ROTC cadets, was forced to replace all but the finance officer before refraining from wearing uniforms at the end of the fall semester.
Another White - trained "boy" will introduce Clymer. He is Oscar Stauffer, publisher of the Topeka State Journal.
Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Journal-World, will preside at the luncheon in the Crystal room of the Hotel Eldridge. The guests will be Kansas editors, members of the board of the William Allen White foundation, donors, faculty, state officials and student representatives.
The other two benches were purchased with money from the general memorial fund.
Those elected were: Richard Wood, college junior, commanding officer; Charles Bether, business senior, executive officer; William Hall, business junior, operations officer; Bob Springer, fine arts junior, adjutant-recorder, and Clarke Keys, college sophomore, public information officer. Burley Vandergriff, business senior, will continue as finance officer.
Preceding the luncheon will be the annual White memorial address given to an all-student convocation by Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor; and the dedication of the William Allen White memorial reading room and mementos in the new building.
Following the luncheon will be the annual meeting of trustees of the White foundation. John P. Harris of Hutchinson, the foundation president, will preside.
Buehler Contest At 7:30 Tonight
Preliminaries for the annual Lorraine Buehler Oriental contest begin at 7:30 p.m. today in 105 Green hall.
Members of the speech and drama department will serve as judges.
Six or seven of the students trying out will advance to the finals Thursday in Strong auditorium.
The contest is open to the public. William A. Conboy, instructor of speech, said it is considered the best example of student speaking during the year.
Engineering Group Elects Officers
Other new officers are Graham Frevert, engineering senior, vicepresident; Glen Shaver, engineering junior, secretary, and Bill Monday, engineering senior, treasurer.
James R. Archibald, engineering senior, has been elected president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers at the University.
A four-man committee was formed to investigate possibilities of obtaining recognition insignia for HAJAS members.
Plans for second semester activities were discussed at the Hap Arnold Junior Air society meeting Wednesday night.
HAJAS Makes Plans For Spring Activities
Members voted to have a stag party within the next month. In addition, a spokesman from the group will contact Arnold Air society officials about co-sponsoring a dance this spring.
Fine art majors may enroll in new classes until noon Saturday, Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts announced today. Students in the school may withdraw from courses without a penalty any time before Saturday, March 8.
A film on diving was shown at the close of the meeting.
Enrollment Closes Saturday
Jukes, Allen To Play Leads In Fry Drama
Mrs. Mary Lou Jukes, graduate student who received an invitation Monday to play in the "Philip Morris Playhouse on Broadway," and Bob Allen, KLWN announcer, will play the leading roles in "The Lady's Not For Burning," third production of the University Players. The play is by Christopher Fry.
Tom Rea, instructor of speech and director of the play, said that Mrs. Jukes will play Jennet and Mr. Allen will play Thomas. The play will be given Feb. 27, 28, 29, and March 1 in Fraser theater.
Others in the cast include Lynn Osborn, college senior, as Richard; D. Price, fine arts freshman, as Alizom; Molly Krival, wife of Arthur S. Kruval, instructor of English, as Margaret Devize; William J. Sollner, assistant professor of English, as Humphrey Devize; James Claussen, college junior, as Nicholas Devize.
Allen Crafton, professor of speech,
as Matthew Skipps; Dan Palmquist,
instructor of speech, as Edward
Tappercoo; George Herman,
instructor of English, as Hebble Tyson,
and Sam Sebesta, education
junior, as the chaplain. Leola Stewart,
education senior, is the prompter.
Harold Harvey, instructor of speech, is building the set. He is being assisted by the stage crew, who are Eugene Walling, college junior; Mark Gilman, college sophomore; Robert Howery, fine arts freshman; Freida Sahm, education senior, and Jo Anna March, college sophomore.
Costumes for the play are in 15th century English style. The costuming committee consists of Shirley Strain, college junior; Barbara Donovan, college senior, and Mary Beth Moore, college junior.
Education School Has Student Drop
Four hundred and thirty-three undergraduate students are enrolled in the School of Education for the spring semester, a decrease of 17 students from registration totals for the fall semester.
The registration total for this semester is 55 students under the total for the spring semester last year.
Approximately the same number of students dropped during the fall semester, as new students enrolled in the school for the spring semester. Fifty-four students dropped out during the fall semester, while 56 new students entered the school.
Kansas State Historical Society
College Senior Chosen Valentine Dance Queen
VIRGINIA LEE ENGLAND
Geologic Expert To Speak Here
Virginia Lee England, college senior, will be ISA Valentine queen at its semi-formal dance Friday, 9 to midnight, at the Lawrence Community building.
Dr. Ben B. Cox, director of the geologic division of the Gulf Research and Development company, Pittsburgh, Pa., will discuss "Clay Minerals" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 21, 426 Lindley.
His talk will cover the present status of knowledge in the fields of clay, methods of investigation, and applications of this research to the oil industry.
Dr. Cox received his geological training at the University of Chicago, the University of Iowa and Columbia university. He has served as a petroleum geologist both in this country and abroad for many years.
1954
The lecture is open to the public.
Patton To Speak At YMCA Meeting
Dr. John Patton, director of Westminster foundation, will speak at the YMCA all-membership meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in Myers hall chapel.
Miss England was chosen by a committee of Lawrence businessmen at a tea beld last night at Miller hall. Emily Wolverton, fine arts freshman, and Nancy Hindman, fine arts junior, were chosen as
Dr. Hall is on terminal leave from the Air Force after serving 18 months as a chaplain. Both Dr. and Mrs. Patton are familiar with YMCA work, having been executive secretaries associated with the "family program" of the Tulsa YMCA.
Kenneth Anderson To Speak At National Conference
Dr. Kenneth Anderson, associate professor of education, will speak at the annual conference of the National Association for Research in Science Teaching on the topic, "Improving Science Teaching Through Realistic Research."
The meeting will be held in Chicago on Friday and Saturday. Dr. Anderson left today for the meeting.
her two attendants.
Entrance photos for the queen position were received from most of the girls' independent halls and the field was narrowed down to three finalists yesterday at the weekly meeting of the ISA council.
Serving on the final judging committee were J. D. King of the Commonwealth theaters, Ernest Pontius, head of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, and G. C. Gregory, proprietor of the Rock Chalk cafe.
The queen is the only University woman accepted for entrance into the School of Medicine for the coming year.
Entertainment for the dance has been arranged by program chairman Bill Doyle. fine arts sophomore.
Tap dancing will be done by Peggy Hughes and Mary Taggart, college freshmen, and Joyce Ristine, fine arts sophomore, will sing accompanied by Rodger Vaughan, fine arts junior.
The dance is free to all ISA members. It will cost 75 cents a couple for non-members. Bob Ausherman, education senior and his band will provide dance music.
Organ Concert To Be Sunday
Otto Meyer, concert organist, will give a recital on the baroque organ in the Museum of Art at 4 p.m. Sunday.
Sunday's program will be the third in a series of organ recitals presented jointly by the Museum of Art and the School of Fine Arts.
Last week was an eventful as well as important one for Phyllis Hiebert, graduate student and assistant instructor in English.
Meyer, who is a graduate of the Berlin Conservatory where he studied organ with Fritz Heitmann and music theory with Paul Hindemith, is the church music director for the city of Ansbach Bavaria.
He is now on a concert tour of the Midwest sponsored by the Kansas City chapter of the American guild of organizers.
Student-Instructor Has Eventful Week
She completed her oral examination Friday for the master's degree. The Sunday before, her father, J. N. C. Hiebert, became the fifth president of Tabor College at Hillsboro, Kan.
Miss Hiebert came to KU as a graduate student in the fall of 1950, from Tabor. This week she became instructor in English at the Pacific Bible institute in Fresno, Calif.
No One Knows How St. Valentine's Day Started, But The Girls Are Glad It Did
By LORENA BARLOW
Have you ever wondered just why you send a valentine to your true love on Feb. 14?
There are three theories about how the custom originated.
One idea is based on the belief throughout Europe during the Middle Ages that the birds began to mate on Feb. 14. In the Paston letters, covering the period from 1422 to 1509, is one by Dame Elizabeth Brews, who writes to John Paston, with whom she hoped to arrange a match for her daughter. She writes:
"And cousin, mine, upon Monday is St. Valentine's day and every bird chooseth himself a mate, and if it like you to come on Thursday night
and make provision that you may abide till then, I trust God that we shall speak to my husband and I shall pray that we may bring the matter to a conclusion."
The third idea stems from an early ceremony of St. Valentine's day, when a kind of lottery, followed by what might be called a game of forfeits, took place.
The second theory is based on the similarity between the Norman word "galantin," meaning a lover of women, and the name of the saint. It is thought that Galantin's day with the initial "g," frequently pronounced "v," led to confusion.
In this lottery the young folk of England and Scotland wrote their names on slips of paper. By lot the names on slips of paper.
maids then drew the men's names, and the men the maids' names. They called each other their "valentines."
The male valentines gave balls and treats to their lady valentines, wore their names upon their sleeves and put them on a sport often ended in love matches.
Since the drawing also included married persons some method was devised to excuse a married man from the celebration. Sometimes presents relieved obligation placed on married persons Thus some maids built up collections of jewels through the years instead of finding true love.
St. Valentine himself, a priest in Rome, martyred in the third century, seems to have had nothing to do with the day named after him.
PAGE 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
Old Reasons Not Valid For Language Study
The average college student is hard to sell on the value of courses not directly related to his major field. He usually feels that requirement of such subjects is part of an insidious plot to load him with needless work and a wealth of useless information.
Probably the most abused of all is the foreign language requirements. It comes up every year because students feel they are victims of arbitrary rules subjecting them to the somewhat questionable merits of a strange tongue.
Shortly after the outbreak of the annual controversy educators present their reasons for the language requirement. There are, of course, some professors who question the value of the requirement, but among advocates of it there is an astonishing similarity of thought.
The main reason for students' bitterness toward the requirement is that they feel no good reasons are given for it.
The usual argument is that studying another language improves the student's English grammar. The fact is that the relatively small time a student spends studying that language doesn't give him any great insight into the intricacies of his own language. Most students would be much better off spending that one or two years studying English.
Some of the controversy surrounding the requirements would be avoided if students could be convinced that it is valuable. Students are not too unreasonable about being shown they are wrong, but they must be shown. If the old, sterile arguments still are used, the controversy is bound to continue cropping up each year.
Another favorite argument is that the study of another language is good mental discipline and teaches students to think. No one has demonstrated that mental discipline is restricted to a particular field. It isn't unreasonable to think that such subjects as political science, economics, and history require certain amounts of mental discipline and thought. Many students, and many private citizens, don't even understand the workings of their own government, and their time would be better spent in thinking about it instead of in trying to memorize a bunch of elementary sentences in another language.
Still another reason given for the requirement is that it offers high cultural values and better understanding of a country and its people. Nonsense. The best way to learn about a country is to study its history, politics and economic problems, not sit around and split foreign infinitives.
If the study of foreign languages really is valuable, as valuable as an equal amount of time spent in other courses, then educators should present some valid reasons for the requirement, convince the students, and stop all this prattle about cultural values and mental discipline. —J.W.Z.
short ones
Garden plots are being offered University faculty and staff members this spring, and the downtrodden student says he hopes the professors will go out and raise grades.
At least, he adds, it will give them something to rake besides their classes.
Temperance is the keynote of today. Even Ibn Saud, ruler of Arabia, neither smokes nor drinks and never has more than four wives at a time.
An albino muskrat is causing excitement in the zoology department, and if the strain can be developed fur manufacturers will be able to cut down on their overhead. They won't have to dye muskrat to call it ermine.
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General Dwight D. Eisenhower is a better than four to one favorite over Harry Truman for President among college students, according to the Associated Collegiate Press national poll of student opinion.
Comments
"Ike" Tops Student Poll. . .
Students from all sections of the country were asked: If Robert Taft and Harry Truman oppose each other in the 1952 presidential election, which one would you prefer to win? The answers:
Robert Taft is also more popular than Truman, but about one-fourth of the college students haven't yet made up their minds about these two candidates.
Taft ... 46%
Truman ... 29%
No opinion ... 25%
And for Eisenhower vs. Truman:
Eisenhower ... 71%
Truman ... 16%
No opinion ... 13%
Every section of the country is overwhelmingly in favor of Eisenhower, as opposed to Truman, but the Taft vs. Truman results indicate certain sectional differences.
The Midwest, for example, is strongest for Taft. A school in Indiana and another in Iowa are 75 per cent Taft supporters, 14 per cent Truman.
Students in Tafi's home state of Ohio are, on the average, somewhat less in favor of him than students in other parts of the country.
Truman is strongest, not in the south, where the vote between him and Taft is about even, but in the far west. The University of California, most pro-Truman of all schools polled, stacks up this way;
Truman ... 43%
Taft ... 21%
No opinion ... 36%
Students still undecided are the most likely to comment. A junior coed in home economics says she doesn't favor Eisenhower because "he's a military man," but "I don't think we should put Truman in again."
A South Dakota sophomore wants Eisenhower, but will not vote on Taft vs. Truman. "I don't agree with either of their policies," he says. And a freshman in liberal arts dismisses the Taft-Truman choice with, "Neither are worth a damn," but votes for Truman against Eisenhower.
A medical freshman would vote for Taft "merely because anybody would be better than Truman." Equally firm is a junior taking economics in Iowa, who says, "Never in my life would I vote for Taft." But he supports Eisenhower.
Advice From Friends . . .
A student at the University of North Carolina was sitting in class working a crossword puzzle when a professor called on him to answer a question. Immediately the student's friends sitting on each side of him began to coach him.
"What's holding you up?" asked the professor. "You ought to know the answer with all your friends' advice."
"Well," replied the student, "there doesn't seem to be any consensus of opinion."
Now that the journalists have moved into their new building we may witness the passing of the old campus joke. "Bailey chemistry lab is foul, but the building across the street is Fowler."
H
KEN COLLINS
"Well, Bruno. At least it wasn't just a line!"
New Evidence In Hiss Case
Two years ago Alger Hiss, a former U.S. state department official, was convicted of perjury and sentenced five years in prison for falsely testifying that he was not part of a Soviet spy ring.
Last week the Hiss trials again sprang into the news when his lawyers filed a motion for a new trial claiming that "forgery by typewriter" is possible. The lawyers were referring to one of the stronger points presented against Hiss when he was convicted in 1950. At that time 42 typewritten state department documents were produced by Whittaker Chambers, who claimed they were given to him by Alger Hiss. It was shown that the documents unquestionably were typed on Hiss's old Woodstock typewriter. Chambers, an admitted ex-Communist courier, said Hiss had been one of the party's sources in the state department.
A great deal of evidence was compiled against Hiss but his lawyers were able to challenge the accuracy of some of it and raise serious doubts against the rest. It was the typewritten documents and Hiss's admittal that he had at one time been acquainted with Chambers that drew the sentence.
Hiss's lawyers argue that the typewriter used at the trial was a fake. Their story assumes that somebody had a typewriter built exactly like one formerly owned by Hiss and that this machine was then smuggled into the place where Hiss's own investigators found it.
At the time of his conviction, Alger Hiss told the court, "I am confident that in the future the full facts showing how Whittaker Chambers was able to carry out forgery by typewriter will be developed." Now, two years and a reported $30,000 later, Hiss's lawyers have come up with a machine whose typing exactly reproduces that of the Woodstock on which the state department documents were supposed to have been copied.
Although the defense are still a long way from proving Hiss innocent they have uncovered a possibility which the courts must investigate.
With the exception of the typewriter evidence, the Hiss trial seemed to be a matter of Alger Hiss's word against that of Whittaker Chambers. It would seem that this new evidence would put the entire case back on that level, which is a weak basis for convic-tion. —Roger Yarrington.
The weather forecaster who never bets on anything but a sure thing, predicts a wave of hot air will sweep across Mt. Oread.
A news story says Errol Flynn buckled when he should have swashed, breaking an ankle. That should settle the old argument about whether you are supposed to buckle a swash or swish a buckle.
News From Other Campuses
Watch Out For The Wiggle Meter.
A professor at the University of Oklahoma has come up with a reliable test of student boredom. It's called the "Wiggle Meter." Wires are strung along on the backs of chairs, and every time a student yawns, stretches or wiggles, the impulse is recorded on a graph.
Just Like The Boy Scouts. . .
Student election officials at the University of California are stopping at nothing in efforts to shock students into voting. They hope to buzz
( )
the campus in a light plane bearing a "Get-the-hell-out-and-vote" sign.
Tough Grading At Annapolis. . .
A superlative note from the Annapolis Log: "They marked the exam so strictly, they flunked him for having a period upside down."
Who Has A Spare Football Field?
14.
At Rider college, (N. J.), chances for fielding a football team next year are very slim. The reason-no home field!
- Former Student Has Role In 'Decision Before Dawn'
A former University student appears in the motion picture, "Decision Before Dawn," which will be shown in Lawrence this week.
The ex-student, Capt. Clarence A. Amos of Fredonia, plays the part of an officer in the picture about the campaign in Germany during World War II. Amos received the role after winning a screen test contest sponsored by 20th Century Fox in 1950 to determine the best soldier actor.
Amos attended KU during the 1939-40 term as a fine arts student. He enlisted in the army in the summer of 1940.
Although he has gained note chiefly as an actor, Captain Amos has displayed talents in other fields. While stationed in Hawaii during World War II, he played halfback on a service football team. He also appeared on many military shows as a baritone singer.
At the Weisbaden base in Germany where he now is stationed, Amos is coach of the post track team. He is also a member of the 18th Weather squadron officers' bowling team.
Not to foresake the artistic aspirations he had while at KU, Amos is taking painting lessons in Germany. He also is taking voice lessons from an opera singer, Ewald Boehmer. Rounding out his activities, the captain enrolled in law courses at the University of Oklahoma while stationed there from 1946 to 1949.
Captain Amos is serving as a personnel officer at Weisbaden.
Proctors Wanted For Western Civ
The Western Civilization office is accepting applications for 1952-53 proctorships during February.
Graduate students interested should see J. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science and Western Civilization, or Mrs. Louise Cochran, instructor of sociology and Western Civilization, in Strong annex C, in order to file an application.
JOHN H. BROOKS
CAPT. CLARENCE A. AMOS
WAVE Officers Seek Recruits
Two WAVE officers, Lt. Alice Anderson and Lt. Gertrude Weiler, will be on the campus Thursday and Friday to interview University women interested in the WAVE Reserve Officer candidate program.
The lieutenants will visit organized houses and may be reached through the NROTC department.
The purpose of the WAVE Reserve Officer candidate program is to recruit WAVE officers or any unit officer for any role, or enlisted as a seamen in the WAVES.
Then they may apply for the ROC program. If accepted, they will be commissioned ensigns in the WAVES upon graduation.
North Carolina textile mills produced 780 million pairs of hose last year, 40 per cent of the United States output.
SPATCH POLITICS
CRAD MILK
"He knows when Everybody gets up and when they go to bed"
The Kansas Power and Light Company Load Dispatcher knows when everybody gets up. It's a part of his job to know what time you and your neighbors start turning on lights, ranges, toasters and radios. The daytime load calls for more electricity and the Load Dispatcher is the man who tells our power-plant employees when to send more current through the wires. These helpful men are always on the job to see that you get all the electricity you want when you want it.
Our Load Dispatchers—and 1700 other employees doing their jobs conscientiously and well—are an important part of the reason why The Kansas Power and Light Company's customers get the best electric service available anywhere!
THE KANSAS POWER and LIGHT COMPANY
By observing how food is prepared and served in different types of institutions, five women majoring in dietetics hope to decide what type of institution they will choose for their internship.
Students Observe Food Preparation
PAGE 3
University Daily Kansan
the five, Bertha Nash, Pat Oliver, Clara Karl, Florene Shelley, and Maxine Miller, all seniors, will be observing the Union kitchens for the first five weeks.
An entirely different situation will be met at Watkins hospital, where the class will spend two weeks. The women will be trained in tray service, selection of menus for the sick, and planning special diets.
The fourth institution visited will be the Faculty club.
By taking turns at being assigned to the baking department, salad unit, cooking department, store room and counter, the students will gain a practical knowledge of how food is prepared and served on a commercial basis.
Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952
The class will observe food preparation at Corbin hall for six weeks. Here they will learn how food is purchased and prepared according to a fixed budget.
Richard M. Bennett, expert in industrial design architecture from Chicago, will be guest lecturer in the department of architecture at the University Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 17 and 18.
Design Expert To Speak Here
Bennett will give a public lecture Monday afternoon at 3 in Strong auditorium. His subject will be "Architecture in the Age of Relativity." Members of the Kansas and Kansas City chapters of the American Institute of Architects have been invited.
The speaker formerly was chairman of the department of architecture at Yale university. He also taught at Rensselaer Polytechnic institute and Columbia university.
KU Bureau Hires Research Assistants
The University bureau of government research has hired two full-time and three part-time research
assistants.
Calvin Henry, a university of Iowa graduate, and Robert Hadley, a university of Kansas graduate, are full-time research assistants.
Cyrus Samii, graduate student from Iran; Chapn Clark, college senior, and Bruce Bailey, college freshman, are the part-time research assistants.
Henry will work in the bureau's training school program. He replaces Norman Blacher, former training program coordinator, who is now with the division of research and budget, Kansas City, Mo.
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Don't sell the little one short
THEY'RE both good basketball players. But if we were to judge them the way we judge
telephone equipment,we'd take the small one.
You see, telephone equipment occupies valuable space, uses costly materials. Paring down its size helps keep down the cost of telephone service.
Take voice amplifiers, for example. Telephone engineers put the squeeze
on size, came up with a new small type. When 600 of these new amplifiers are mounted on a frame two feet wide and eleven feet high, they do a job which once required a roomful of equipment. Size was cut-but not performance!
This is one of many cases where the Bell System has made big things small to help keep the cost of telephone service low.
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
PARKS AND REPRESENTATIONS
PAGE 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952
Kansas To Meet Huskers Saturday
An ailing team of KU Jayhawkers will be gunning for their fifth straight win over Nebraska when the Cornhuskers come to Hoch auditorium Saturday night.
After thumping the Huskers three times last year—by scores of 63-47, 60-41 and 61-52—Kansas made it four-in-a-row with a 69-66 decision at Lincoln earlier this year. Nebraska polled its last victory with a narrow 57-56 win in 1950.
But while all roads would apparently point to number five for the Jayhawks, at least two KU players—senior forward Bill Lienhard and reserve freshman Larry Davenport—are busy fighting another battle with the influenza bug. These illnesses plus several colds and a wrenched knee here and there put the Jayhawkers in their worst physical shape of the season.
After Nebraska, the University will still have two games left at home — Oklahoma A&M, Tuesday, Feb. 19, and Missouri, Monday, Feb. 25—before meeting Oklahoma at Norman March 1.
Even though Kansas is naturally thinking somewhat of its return game with the Aggies from Stillwater, Tuesday, and the league battle with Missouri's Tigers the following Monday, it will still be the Cornhuskers handing out the trouble Saturday.
And before underating Nebraska, it's necessary to take a closer look at the Jan. 14 game at Lincoln. The seldom - recognized Cornhuskers pulled one of the scare games of the year that left Phog Allen's charges shaking like jelly out of a jar when it was over.
By controlling the ball for the last 65 seconds of the game, the Jayhawks were able to pull their slim three-point victory out of the fire.
Trailing nearly all the way—sometimes by as much as 13 points—Coach Harry Good's Nebraskans just wouldn't roll over and play dead. Storming back,NU narrowed the gap to 65-60 with little more than five minutes left in the game. From then on it was anybody's ball game.
But though the erratic Huskers hit a torrid 45 per cent of their shots against KU, they went back to the boards later in the week against K-State and accounted for a paltry 15
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per cent of 95 shots.
So the whole story Saturday would seem to depend on four things: (1) will KU's aliling players be ready? (2) how far off is the Jayhawk game going into the backstretch? (3) can Nebraska make a similar "break-for-the-wire" finish of Jan. 14? (4) who gets the breaks?
Varsity House - Feather Merchants
Robinson Gym
Fraternity "B"
Oread - Stephenson
I-M Schedule
Tonight Independent "A"
Phi Delta Theta - Beta Theta Pi
R·A!
7:45
Delta Upsilon - Phi Gamma Delta
Independent "B"
Varsity House - Jolliffe 5.45
Roger Williams - AFROTC
**Fraternity" "C"**
8:45
Nu Sigma Nu - Alpha Tau Omega
Beta Theta Pi - Lambda Chi
9:45
Phi Kappa Psi - Phi Delta Theta
Students Agree In Poll That 'School Spirit' Is Lacking
Bv JOHNNY HERRINGTON
School Spirit at KU—off cussed and discussed by students, newspapers and other mediums—is definitely lacking. That is, if public opinion polls can still be counted upon for accurate information.
From a symposium taken by Kansan reporters, covering 39 students and former students, a much-talked issue—its defiency" reared its ugly head.
Both men and women students from every class in the University are of the nearly unanimous opinion UF fans don't "Rah-rah" enough.
Twenty-seven persons stated—in some form or other—that they didn't approve of the present school spirit, and several gave methods in which it might be improved. Ten of the twenty seven persons believed thought school spirit was adequate. And two just plain weren't interested.
Several ideas as to why this apparent shortage of spirit was present at the University were given. They ranged anywhere from having "more athletic contests on weekends," to "there can be no spirit where there is no incentive."
One college junior put it very bluntly in saying, "KU's school spirit is very poor."
One college sophomore ventured the opinion that "with so many age groups and interests represented at a university such as this, it is difficult to get a school spirit started."
Still another thinks it's "just plain lousy." A remedy? '.. . more all-student dances.'
"Students lack pride in KU and therefore also lack school spirit," a college sophomore said.
A prophetic college junior said it still another way: "School spirit never dies, it just fades away."
A college freshman thinks we need better yells. Still another sophomore urges a a "revival of some of
One of the more satisfied among the questioned said that, "some people like to watch games, not yell all the time. There's nothing the matter with school spirit just because the students don't cheer all the time."
An education major said, "I don't see what all the fuss is about. After all this is a university. We're supposed to be here to study, not rahraing at games."
the school traditions such as the singing of the Alma Mater at the end of the games."
Yell sheets handed out to various organized houses so that house members could learn the University's methods suggested by a fine arts sophomore.
A college freshman said, "I don't think we need more school spirit. After all, we're older now and we don't get as excited over the same things that we did in high school."
A college freshman said she thought more school spirit was needed but "my main gripe is that there is too much attention called to school spirit all the time."
An architecture senior is of the belief that "there is more spirit around than you think."
A college junior brought in the loyalty angle with, "the trouble is, more students have a bigger allegiance to some other organization. A student will be a Sigma Phi Nothing first and a KU student last."
All-in-all, members of the student body have something to say about school spirit at the University and think there is room for great improvement.
Clearance Jackets 1/3 Sweaters to Blouses 1/2 off
Cage Scores
HARZFELD'S
Seton Hall 66, Rutgers 42
LaSalle 74, Pennsylvania 58
Temple 59, Albright 58
Army 62, Amherst 50
Boston 87, Brown 72
Lehigh 64, Bucknell 60
Princeton 70, Columbia 63
Cornell 69, Harvard 44
Delaware 81, Ursinus 54
Maine 67, Bates 56
Swarthmore 80, Drexel Tech 53
Fordham 64, Iona 49
LaFayette 83, Muhlenberg 74
Penn Military 67, Haverford 44
Providence 77, MIT 54
St. Joseph's (Pa.) 61, Newark
Rutgers 40
Wagner 72, St. Lawrence 54
Trinity 75, Worcester Tech 50
Vermont 50, Middlebury 48
Villanova 83, Rider 61
Bridgeport 61, New Britain St. 52
Table Tennis Leader To Be In Tournament
Caroline Crosier, education senior,
will be one of the KU students entered
in the Western United States
table tennis tournament, to be held
in Kansas City Saturday and Sunday.
Miss Crosier, a resident of Lawrence, won the 1951 Missouri Valley women's singles championship, and was second in the tournament this year.
A field of more than 250 of the Middle West's top table tennis players, including students from Kansas, Kansas State, Iowa University and Park college, will participate.
There will be nine divisions of play, with the matches run off in four sessions on five tables. The play on Saturday will be at 2 and 7 p.m., and 1 and 7 p.m. on Sunday.
The tournament will be held in the YMCA building at Tenth and Oak street in Kansas City,Mo.
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Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952 University Daily Kansan PAGE
Basketball Starts Second Round In IM Playoffs
In the second round of men's intramural basketball playoffs, Stephenson hall, Phi Beta Pi, Feather Merchants and the Geology club were winners in the Independent "A" games.
Stephenson hall and the Geology club were forced to play in overtime periods to win their games.
Stephenson won a 32-29 decision over ASCE in the opener. Trailing 17-13 at the half, they came back with sharp offensive play and tied the score at 29-28.
Galen Kelly dropped in a free throw early in the overtime to give the winners a single point margin, and John Wilkinson followed with a field goal. This gave Stephenson a 3 point victory.
Phi Beta Pi led Jolliffe hall 12-11 the intermission of their game, and in the second half came back equally strong to finish with a 12 point lead, 37-25.
Walt Haskins led the scoring for Stephenson with 11 points (four field goals and three free throws).
Bob Payne was Phi Beta's top scorer with 17 (seven goals from the field and three at the line).
Gil Reich led the winners' scoring with 19 points (six field goals and seven free throws).
The Feather Merchants led all the way in scoring an easy 41-25 victory over Battenfeld.
The final game of the night,
paired the Geology club with the
Geology club. The game also went
into overtime with the Geology
club winning, 44-40.
The Dark Horses had a 16-11 lead mid-way through the second quarter, but the geologists scored eight tight points to lead 19-16 at the half.
At the end of the regulation time, the score was tied at 36, but in the overtime the Geology club outscored their opponents by four points.
Vat Murphy led the Dark Horse
task with 10, but Stucker of the
Geology club took top honors with
12 points.
WAA Valentine Party In Robinson Today
The Women's Athletic association will hold a Valentine party at 4 p.m. today in Robinson gym.
Foster, Tri-Delt's Win Basketball Semi-Finals
There will also be a business meeting, and members are requested to attend.
By JACKIE JONES
The women's intramural basketball semi-final games went to Delta Delta Delta and Foster hall in last night's action in Robinson gvm.
The tri-Delt's defeated the Jay-
ettets, 48-46, and Foster won over
Kappa Alpha Theta, 49-46. Both
games were close all the way.
Tuesday, Feb. 19, the tri-Delt's and Foster will clash in the final game which will decide the women's Hill championship.
The Foster-Theta tilt was one of the top games of the year, and it was not until the last few seconds that the foster was sure of coming out on top.
They held a six point lead at the end of the first quarter, at the half it was 23-20 in their favor, and in the last half the Theta's matched them point for point.
The winners used their usual offensive starters, Shirley Mickelson, Philiph and Ernestine Dehlinger. The scoring was well divided.
Dhelingler led Foster's scoring with 19 points, Mickelson had 15 and Philipp tallied 15. The guards were Marlene Peterson, Virginia Brooks, Jappy Rau and Darlene Meritt.
Barbara Quinn led the Theta scoring with 19, Sydney Ashton had 12 points and Carolyn Campbell scored 15. The Theta guards were Mary Holte, Nancy Seaman, Nancy Gilchrist and Penny Hoover.
The tri-Delts had a tough struggle with the Jayettes, but after
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the score was tied with two minutes left to play the tri-Delt's took over a 2 point lead and held it for the rest of the game.
The winners led from the first of the game, and the Jayettes could never catch them. Pat Garrett led off with a hook shot from the left side, and then scored a free throw to give tri-Delts a 3-0 lead.
At the half it was 32-23 in their favor, but in the second period the Jayettes settled down and more than matched them in points.
Garrett led the tri-Delt scoring with 23 points, Marilyn Marchofer had 9 and Chloe Warner scored 15. This was Warner's best game of the season.
The tri-Delt guards were Joan Carter, Mary Loveless, Sue Quinn, Grace Endacott and Shirlev Wilkie.
Jackie Jones led the Jayettes' scoring with 17 points, Mary Snead had 16 and Joyce Jones scored 13. Sue Buckingham fouled out early in the game and failed to score.
The Jayette guards were Billie Davis, Dorothy Rexrode, and Peggy Schick.
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SAVE OFTEN
and You'll
SAVE A LOT!
It's the pennies . . . the nickles . . . the dimes you save every time you shop at Rusty's and Cole's that produce the BIG SAVINGS on your food bill. And you do save money everytime you shop here because we make every price a low price every day. We do it through economical, efficient storekeeping and by constantly searching the markets for the best food buys for you. All we ask is that you shop here for one month. You'll be convinced that you save more when you save often.
Rusty and Jimmy
Values Galore
Washday Marvel Lge. Box
**CHEER** 25c
Grapefruit 46 oz. Can
**JUICE** 19c
Sno Kreem 3 lb. Tin
**SHORTENING** 79c
Royal Guest 12 oz. btl.
**CATSUP** 15c
Bartlett No. 303 Can
**PEARS** 19c
Dog Food 1 lb. Can
**STRONGHEART** 10c
Fruits & Vegetables
Tender Green Top 2 bunches
**CARROTS** 15c
Calif. Iceberg lge. heads
**LETTUCE** 2-19c
Texas New med. heads. lb.
**CABBAGE** 5c
Red Delicious 3 lbs.
**APPLES** 25c
Calif. Sunkist 344's 2 doz.
**ORANGES** 39c
Quality Meats
Fresh Cut-up each
FRYERS 89c
Fresh Lean lb.
GROUND BEEF 59c
Wilson's Pure lb.
LARD 17c
Pork Loin lb.
ROAST 43c
Ohse's All Meat lb.
FRANKS 49c
RUSTY'S
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ICA
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952
American Gives His Impression Of European Eating Customs
By JON PEARCE
American food and eating habits, among other things, are often confusing to European students at the University. Stewart Gordon college junior, understands how they feel, for he spent three year in various European countries before enrolling at the University this fall.
"When I ordered a meal I never knew what to expect," Gordon said. In France, a meal is very elaborate. Many dishes are stacked around you. You are expected to fill them up with hors d'oeuvres such as mushrooms in sauce, salted herring and smoked ham. Then comes soup
- French onion soup, which has a cheese souffle on top and lots of onions and bread."
"The main dish is then ordered—meat and potatoes. The cooked vegetables come next and are served after the main course has been eaten. Wild strawberries are a favorite dessert after which comes strong coffee. Also, the French drink wine all during the meal."
A meal is much simpler in Germany.
course. A dessert such as cheese cake and coffee round out the meal," Gordon said.
The German meat shop is a highly individual place.
"Many compounded meat loaves such as eel, a favorite, or fish and beef are sold there. The butchers make figures out of the lard and display these 'art objects' in the window to attract attention," Gordon said.
"An Italian meal starts with hors d'oeuvres. After that comes a huge plate of spaghetti or ravioli. Then comes the main course of meat and vegetables. Dessert is usually a fresh fruit, often an orange. Wine is served during the meal."
As to students who plan to go to Europe, Gordon said, "I hope American students realize what they are in for when they travel to Europe. Food differs greatly from one country to another, but it's good—usually."
Streetcar Named Desire Finally Reaches Destination-12 Academy Award Nominations
Hollywood — U.(P.)— “A Streetcar Named Desire” ran off with 12 nominations for the 1951 Academy awards—but the untold story is that the streetcar almost got derailed.
The movie industry itself voted Streetcar" a candidate for every-thing from best movie to best acting Oscar.
Yet a year ago Hollywood wouldn't touch this picture. And the prize film, its producer admitted today, almost didn't get made.
"Streetcar" was a rousing Broadway success that collected such honors as the Pulitzer prize. But it didn't one movie-maker tried to buy it.
The film factories feared the censors would shred the story about the nymphomaniac who pretends to be a lady. And, they reasoned over whether the publicist doesn't go for "adult" yarns with "unhappy endings."
Finally a talent agent, Charles
eldman, bought the unwanted
tory for $350,000, and decided to
produce it himself.
"Everybody thought it was downbeat, but I had faith in it," he said.
He signed the play's author, Tennessee Williams; its director, Elia Kazan and its star, Marlon Brando, to repeat their jobs in the picture. Then he couldn't find a studio to release it.
Only one—Warner Brothers finally came forth.
But Feldman's problems in the plaster city weren't over.
He didn't show the script to the Breen office, movietown's own censors, because he thought it had a better chance on film than on paper. But no bank would loan him money to make the movie until he had the censors' okav.
"I had to sink $500,000 into the movie myself," he says.
The rest is boxoffice history. Under Kazan's tasteful direction, the sordid story was passed by the censors with nary a cut. And the public that Hollywood figures like only comedies and westerns paid $2,000,-000 to see "Streetcar" the first 11 weeks it was shown.
"Tm gratified," says Feldman. "But it's not unusual. Nobody in
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905
905
Delta Sigma Pi smoker, 7:30 to-night, Military Science lounge.
Student Union library committee, 4:30 today. Hawk's Nest.
Christian Science meeting, 7 to-night, Danforth chapel.
Official Bulletin
AWS senate, 4:30 today, Corbin.
AWS senate, 4:30 today. Corbitt.
Danforth chapel service, 8:30 a.m.
Sunday. Sponsored by Gamma
Delta.
Gamma Delta cost supper. 5:30 p.m. Sunday, 17th and Vermont. Group discussion, "Universal Military Training."
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30-8:30 tonight, 206 Strong, Dr. R. L. Decker of Kansas City, speaker.
IVCF Missionary meeting, Friday noon to 12:50. Danforth chapel.
Faculty forum, Monday noon,
Faculty club, "Universal Military
Training."
WAA business meeting and Valentine party, 4 today, Robinson gym. Bring dues.
YMCA all-membership meeting, 7:30 tonight, Myers hall chapel, Dr. Patton speaking on his experiences as a chaplain in USAF.
Math club, 5 today, 203 Strong, Irwin Gaston, speaker.
No regular Red Pepper meeting this week. Pictures will not be taken.
Red Pepper meeting for new members, 5 today, 110 Fraser.
Scabbard and Blade, 7 tonight,
Hawk's Nest. Union. No uniform.
KU Young Republician club, 7:30 tonight, 106 Green hall. Rep, Charles D. Stough, speaker. Election of officers will follow.
Psychology club, 7:30 tonight, 9 Strong hall. All psych students and faculty urged to attend.
Make application for following positions on "College Daze" and turn in to Student Union Activities office or Dick Klassen by noon Feb. 21. Costumes, make-up, programs, editor, art editor, advertising manager, ticket chairman, secretarial staff, vocal director.
town wanted to make 'The Great Caruso,' either."
Today Hollywood is proud of "Streetear" and boasts that occasionally the town turns out a grown-up movie. But, as we say, behind that movie—well, they just don't talk about it around here.
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Alpha Kappa Lambda Pledges
Three men were recently pledged to Alpha KappaLambda fraternity. They are Willis Earl Salyers, engineering junior, Parsons; Ronald Lett, college sophomore, Hickman Mills, Mo., and Herbert Lechner, college sophomore, Salina.
Law Students Discuss Baseball At Phi Delta Pi Luncheon
The legal implications or organized baseball were discussed by three members of Phi Delta Phi, honorary law fraternity, at a luncheon Wednesday at the Dine-A-Mite inn.
The anti-trust act has raised a
legal situation in regard to contracts and agreements of ornateized baseball, and its consideration as interstate commerce.
Jerome Jones, Tom Schwinn and Odd Williams, third year law students, who have done research on the problem, discussed for the group!
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YOUR EYES
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should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 4025 1025 Mass.
Launder At Risk's - It's EASY
Just leave your clothes at Risk's to be washed while you shop. Pick them up later — fresh, clean, and dry. You pay only 50c for this service.
RISK'S self-service LAUNDRY
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Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
---
**Advertising Meetings**
Terms: Cah, Phone numbers accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in person (e.g., by fax or e-mail except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals must be submitted by 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00
Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c
TRANSPORTATION
FOUR-CAR POOL commuting to KC daily 8-5. five days. Want 5th car. Call Don House, Ar 4080 between 6:30 and 9 p.m. 19
ARLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for business or leisure activities. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 613-589-3155, Downs Service. 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book tour packages. Summer. Call Miss Glesman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 303-672-5180.
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING DONE promptly and accurately. Bring to Mrs. Merritt at 1409 Rhode Island, 2nd floor apartment, or call 2670J. 20
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop. 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
(land). tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Joece, 83 Ls LA. Apt. 4. upstairs. Ph. ff. 2753.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am. until midnight. **tt**
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1091. Mass. tt
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality packs. We have the finest test equipment, high-end equipment, efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. tt
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our store is located at 1218 Bellville Dr, fir, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tf
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Plus: Late News Events
Sports "Paddle Your Own Canoe"
HONG KONG starring RONALD RHONDA REAGAN-FLEMING
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Last Times Tonne "BUNCO SQUAD" "CAPTAIN HORATIO NHORNBLOWER"
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
Tim Holt
"LAW OF THE
BADLANDS"
Llovd Bridges "THE WHISTLE AT EATON FALLS" Ch. 1 "The Roar of The Iron Horse"
CRYSTAL CASTLE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malls, home-made pies and cakes. Free sandwiches for customers. Welcome. Open. Am. tf. midnight. Crystal Cake. 690 Vt.
FOR SALE
BEAT-UP 36 "Plymouth marked down to $50. Goes. Sealed-beam lights. Strong engine and battery. Displayed edge drill field, west of Sumside. Call 28418. 18
1948 BUICK special sedan and 1949 PONTIAC special sedan. 1950 LINCOLN, or phone Lawrence 822. 823.
BOOK-EASE IS the collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, anywhere, and on the page finish in place. Now just 98c at your student Union Book Store.
SPECIAL STUDENT RATES on Time, Life, and Newsweek subscriptions. Get yours now at the Student Union Book Store. 15
TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES! All top grade bond paper, onion skin, and carbon papers to make your typing easier. Student Union Book Store. 15
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RENT A TYPEWRITER NO! Choose from our wide selection of portables. Your grades improve when you type your papers. Student Union Book Store. 15
FOR RENT
MISCELLANEOUS
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
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Almen, 3110R
University Daily Kansan
Daytona Beach, Fla.—(U.P.)The automotive world, gathered on Daytona's hard-packed sands for stock car speed week, is in a dither today over a gyroscopic gimmick known as "The Thing" which may save innumerable lives on the highway.
"The Thing" is a metal tube about four feet long and three inches in diameter which is hooked to the chassis just back of the rear wheels. It absolutely prevents skidding or rear-end weaving on wet or icy roads.
Invented by a California doctor, the bar first came to light at the Indianapolis last spring. Duke Nalon had set new lap and trial records in one of the famed Novi specials when a bar came to Diller Park, both with marks and raise the lap speed to 137 miles an hour and the trial speed to 136.
New Gadget Helps Cars
Faulkner was going into those turns like a man who was tired of living. But nobody could understand why he didn't pirate. And as I how he did it, Faulkner smiled and replied: "The Thing."
That's all they could get him to say. There were many and varied guesses as to how he kept his iron buggy from crawfishing. Some figured it was due to design of his
LOST
BLACK, SUEDE purse with bilfold and identification in Union cafeteria after 1 week. 8. Identification verifiable valuble. Call Leta Larrew at 900. No questions asked.
STARTS FRI. 1-BIG WEEK-1 CALL HIM TRAITOR... CALL HIM HERO... CALL HIS STORY Unforgettable!
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STARTS FRI. FOR 1-BIG WEEK-1
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Unforgettable!
Here is the passion,
the power, the suspense-
packed drama of George
Howe's Christophers Award
novel, "Call It Treason". A
screen masterpiece from
ANATOLE
LITVAK
who gave the world
"The Snake Pit"
20th CENTURY-FOX'S
DECISION BEFORE DAWN
"DECISION BEFORE DAWN" with RICHARD BASEHART • CARV MERRILL • OSKAR
WERNER • HILDEGARDE NEFF • Dominique Blancher • O. E. Hasse • Wilfried Seyfert
Hans Christian Blech • Helene Thimig • Robert Freytag • Produced by ANATOLE LITVAK
and FRANK McCARTHY • Directed by ANATOLE LITVAK • Screen Play by PETER VIERTEL
Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952
LAST TIMES
TONITE
Dick Powell Peggy Dow "YOU NEVER CAN TELL"
Matinee Friday 2:30 p.m. Doors Open 2 p.m.
Evening • 7:12 and 9:23 p.m. Continuous Sat. and
Sun. • 12:45-2:58-5:09-7:20 and 9:31 p.m.
New PATEE PHONE 321
Barbwire Supply In Korea Is Enough To Fence In U.S.
U. S. Army In Korea—(U.P.)—Enough barbwire has been brought into Korea, through the major port at Pusan, to build a double apron of fence completely around the United States.
Enough sand bags have gone through the second logistical supply command's engineer depot to build a wall two and one-half feet thick
car and that the cost most prominently mentioned was $25,000.
Actually, "The Thing" was this $39.50 Gyroscopictype balancing bar.
This revelation was made by Frank Spiller, a Cleveland racing equipment salesman, who is astounding the speed world with his demonstration of how the bar works. He'll take you in his car, cut loose on a wet road at 80 or 90 miles an hour, and then slam on the brakes with a fiendish vigor which prompts mental pictures of the morgue, or at least, a long sojourn in sick bay
Then your eyes pop as his car grinds to a straight stop without that fisttail finish which gives you the highway horrors on rainy or ice days.
"This is 'the thing' which permitted Faulkner to go into those Indianapolis turns faster than anybody else dared to," Spiller disclosed. "The bar combats centrifugal force and gives traction to all four wheels all the time. It may well be on every car in the United States some day."
and four feet high across the nraro waist of this war-torn peninsula
More than 120,000,000 board feet of lumber has passed through the engineer depot. That's enough splitters to make a block 1,000 feet square and 10 feet thick. Each month an amount equal to 15 or 2 inches is being added to the thickness of this gigantic hunk of timber.
That gives a little indication of the magnitude of the engineer suppo given to front line troops in Korea
Getting engineer equipment into Korea and getting it forward to the troops in the line is a major part of the engineer mission in Korea.
There is another side of the story. In keeping with the army-wide supply economy program, the 536th engineer field maintenance company is applying its skill and experience to the repair and maintenance of engineer equipment that would otherwise have to be replaced with items shipped to Korea from Japan or the United States.
Each week, the 536th, composed of five officers and 153 enlisted men works long hours in two large concrete shops, with two ideas in min—to save money and to keep the engineer 'show' on the road.
The greatness...the glory...
the fury...of
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Northwest
Frontier!
Universal International presents
JAMES STEWART • ARTHUR KENNEDY
JULIA ADAMS • ROCK HUDSON
BEND OF THE RIVER
COLOR BY Technicolor
Starting
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Saturday 11:15 p.m.
The greatness...the glory...
the fury...of
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Universal International
Universal International presents
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COLOR BY Technicolor
SUNDAY Granada
PAGE 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952
News Roundup
New Plant To Produce Continuous Flow Of Power
Oak Ridge, Tenn.—(U.P.)—Scientists predicted today a new kind of atomic power plant under construction here will be producing large amounts of electricity "in the not too distant future."
Dr. A. M. Weinberg, research director of the atomic energy commission's vast Oak Ridge national laboratory, will new plant with existing newsman.
It will be a "homogeneous reactor," energized by splitting atoms in a sort of hot soup from which, it is expected, a continuous flow of power can be produced.
Newsmen came here at the AEC's invitation to visit the Oak Ridge atomic pile, oldest nuclear reactor now doing full time work, and other facilities which were taken off the secret list only recently.
Employees Vote On Gas Proposal
Wichita - (U.P.) A poll of the operating engineers union membership on a final offer by the Cities Service Gas company was under way today.
Details of the company's wage proposal were not disclosed. It was made in an attempt to prevent a strike that could affect gas service to 1,800,000 users in Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, and Texas
sag, Oklahoma. The union's policy committee and executive board studied the offer in a day-long session yesterday and decided to present it to the membership.
A federal mediator indicated that the two parties in the labor dispute were near agreement except for minor issues.
3 Nations To Help Produce F-86's
Washington—(U.P.) —The United States, Canada and Britain have pooled their resources to build and fly several hundred F-86 Sabre jet planes to help strengthen Western Europe's air defenses.
Under the three- nation agreement, announced jointly Wednesday night, Canada will build the plane bodies, America will supply the engines and instruments and Britain will provide the pilots.
Fatal Air Crash Cause Established
Elizabeth, N.J.—(U.P.)—One engine was not working at all and the propeller of a second was spinning in reverse pitch when a National airlines four-engine DC-6 passenger plane crashed here Monday with a loss of 32 lives, Civil Aeronautics
board investigators said today.
The board investigator's report said the "malfunctioning" of the plane's two right engines caused the plane to crash into an Eiffel tower. The airplane was climbing over the city following its take off from nearby Newark airport.
Air War Resumes:
One Red Plane Hit
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea —(U.P.)-American Sabre jet pilots damaged one Communist MIG-15 fighter plane today in the first air battle in three days over North Korea.
Thirty of the Russian-built jets attempted to break through a screening force of F-86 Sabre jets to attack United Nations fighter-bombers hammering away at Red supply lines. Twenty-nine Sabres chased the MIGs back to the Yalu river before they could get at the Allied bombers.
On the ground, a flurry of Chinese Communist probing attacks exploded along the quiet western front and an Allied officer described the period as "one of our most active in two months."
Britons Continue To Honor King
London—U.(P.)Britons filing by King George VI's coffin in West-minster hall passed the 200,000 mark today and tens of thousands more waited patiently in snow, sleet and rain for their turn.
Tomorrow the coffin will be taken in a majestic funeral procession from Westminster hall to Paddington station for the train journey to a final resting place in St. George's chapel at Windsor castle.
Four Staff Changes Made At Library
Four changes have been made in the full-time staff of the library.
Mrs. Janet Teeter has been transferred to the reserve desk, Mrs. Jane Muth to circulation, Mrs. Dana L. Saliba to engineering and Mrs. Helen Wilson to the Green room.
Changes were made because of the resignations of Mrs. Charlotte McCarthy, engineering Mrs. Coral Sydney, Green room, and Mrs. Lois Athon, circulation.
A&P
Super Market
Spring Food Values
2 No. 2 Cans
IONA TOMATOES ___ 31c
Cold Stream Ready to Eat Tall No. 1 Can
SALMON ___ 49c
Banquet Brand One Whole Chicken Ready to Serve
CHICKEN ___ $1.49
Country Fresh Dozen
EGGS ___ 35c
Pure 1 lb. Box
LARD ___ 17c
Ann Page-Pineapple Plum 1 lb. Jar
PEACH PRESERVES 25c
Polor Frozen, LIMA BEANS, PEAS 12 oz. Pkg.
**CORN, BROCCOLI** -------------------- 19c
Sunkist Frozen 2-6 oz. Cans
**ORANGE JUICE** -------------------- 33c
KU Law Grads Take Bar Oath
Walter Neibarger, Supreme Court clerk, administered the oath in a ceremony before justices of the Kansas Supreme Court.
Twelve of the 43 Law school graduates recently admitted to the Kansas Bar in Topeka are graduates of the University.
Those sworn in included graduates of Washburn university, Topeka; the University of Kansas and Kansas City university, Kansas City, Mo.
They are Aubrey Alphonso Perkins, Lawrence; James Frederick Swoyer Jr., Oskaloosa; James Lewis Grimes Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Roderick Edward Weltmert, Mankato; William John Conroy, Beloit, and John Rarig Oliver, Culver.
3 Students Elected To History Board
Russell Alfred Stanley, Cunningham; Normal Gail Maben, Wichita; Arthur Eugene Rudd, Mullinville; James Robert Barr, Leavenworth; Richard Lyle Ashley, Chanute, and Ralph G. Henley, Sedalia, Mo. Phil Gene Clark, Greenleaf, also admitted, is a former student.
Kermit Sewell, college junior; Henry Bradshaw, college senior; and Delorais Decker, college junior; were elected to the executive committee of the History club last night.
John B. George, of the Institute of Current World Affairs, told the group about the contrasts found in earth sciences, telaview, soil, people, cultures, and religion.
Mr. George explained the British administration in East Africa, how the colonial officials are selected, and the form of government by direct and indirect rule.
This is the first time student representatives have been placed on the executive board of the club. Previously the board was led by members of the history department and officers of Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity.
The next meeting of the club will be March 5.
Auto Penalty Starts Friday
Kansas motorists have until Friday to obtain the 1952 numerals for 1951 license plates before a 50-cent penalty is assessed. An additional 50-cent charge goes into effect March 1 and each succeeding month of failure to comply.
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Marvin To Speak On KLWN Sunday
Dean Burton W, Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will speak on "1952-Test Year for the Press" at 9:45 a.m. Sunday over radio station KLWN.
The broadcast will be the third of the Sociology on the Air series, sponsored by the department of sociology and anthropology.
State Legislator To Speak
State Representative Charles D. Stough will be the guest speaker at the first 1952 meeting of the Young Republicans at 7:30 p.m. today in 106 Green hall.
Representative Stough's subject will be "Political Trends in Kansas in the Past Two Years." Election of officers will be held. Everyone is invited.
Union Bridge Tourney Begins
Thirty couples registered for the Student Union intramural bridge tournament which began Monday night in the Union recreation room.
William R. Scott, assistant professor of mathematics, is the scorer and recorder for the tournament.
The couples with the top scores following the opening round were: Francis Prosser, graduate student, and Harvey Grande, college senior; John Buford, business senior, and Roland Graham, education senior; James Grande, graduate student, and Jessica Foster, graduate student; Dean Darling, education junior, and William H. Edmonds, college senior and Marilyn Muehlbach, college sophomore and Mary Joan Record, college sophomore.
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or the bridge fonday room scores were: student, senior; r, and senior; t, and student; r, and senior college record,
professor scorement.
Daily Kansan
Lawrence, Kansas
49th Year, No. 90
Friday. Feb. 15. 1952
THE KANSAS CITY PHILHARMONIC orchestra will play a concert at 8:20 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium. Dr. Hans Schwieger, conductor, will direct the 80 piece orchestra. ID cards admit students.
News Photographers To Take Course Here
Newspaper photographers from 15 Midwestern, Southern and Rocky Mountain states will participate in a photo-journalism course at the University April 17 through 19.
The course is one of three annual events beginning this year in the United States in a program sponsored by the National Press Photographers association and Encyclopedia Britannica.
Arthur Witman a regional vicepresident of the NPPA, and Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information are collaborating on program arrangements. The course will be held in the new journalism building.
Photographers from Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Indiana, Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado and Texas will attend. The University Extension is handling registration and housing details.
The opportunity to be host to such a course comes at a very appropriate time for the William Allen White school," Dean Marvin said in announcing the event.
"With our move into the new journalism building, we are preparing for great expansion in photo-journalism education. Demand for reporter - photographers and journalists who can think in terms of picture stories is increasing steadily. It is clear that we are entering a new media this summer; communication will be more and more in demand and will serve an extremely important purpose in society."
The course will include studies of lighting, subject-posing, technical improvements in cameras, film color equipment and darkroom, techniques.
Picture editors, news editors and managing editors will be invited, since the theme of the short course will be "camera reportage," and some non-technical data will be discussed.
Twenty to 25 lectures and demon-
Campus Affairs To Meet Wednesday
The Campus Affairs committee meeting will be Wednesday, Feb. 20 instead of the date announced on Friday for the numbers by the Dean of Men's office.
The meeting will be at 7:15 p.m. in 222 Strong. Anne Lehmman, college junior will lead a discussion on student fellowship.
story on student fellowship.
strations will be given in the threeday period.
the other short courses in the program will be held at Boston university April 25 and the University of Wisconsin June 23 through 25.
The six finalists in the Lorraine Buehler oratorical contest are: Richard Sheldon, college sophomore; William Van Almen, business junior; Don Dirkis, college junior; Sue Moyer, college freshman; Wilbur Goodseal, education senior, and Win Koerper, college senior.
Six Are Finalists In Oratory Contest
These six will compete in the finals Thursday evening, Feb. 21, in Strong auditorium.
They are survivors in a field of 13 who tried out in the preliminaries Thursday night.
Judges for the preliminaries were Mrs. Frances Feist, instructor of speech; Wilson O'Connell, assistant instructor of speech, and Gerald Pearson, director of extension classes.
Songs included in her selections are "Down in the Forest" and "O, Lovey Night" by Landon Ronald, "Little Shepherd's Song," and "Joy" by Winter Watts and "Do Not Go, My Love" by Haggerman.
the weekly buffet supper preceded by an entertainment program will be given at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Faculty club.
Mrs. Dale E. Turner will present a light vocal program. She is the wife of Rev. Turner, professor in the School of Religion.
William A. Conboy, instructor of speech who served as master of ceremonies for the preliminaries.
Vocalist To Sing At Faculty Supper
She will also sing numbers by Victor Herbert.
Mrs. Turner will be accompanied by Mrs. Reginal Strait.
WEATHER
Mostly cloudy tonight and Saturday; occasional light snow in Southwest tonight and light snow Northwest and light rain or snow in the South Saturday. Colder in the Southeast portion this afternoon. Lows tonight in 20's.
The Universal Day of Prayer will be observed by Christian students of more than 50 nations at 7:15 p.m. Sunday at Trinity Luther church
Held annually since 1897, the observance, sponsored by the World Student Christian federation, gives Christian students an opportunity to give evidence of their unity, transcending boundaries of race, denomination, and nation.
Day Of Prayer To Be Observed
The program for Sunday will be sponsored by the KU Student Religious council and is open to all students. A collection will be taken to support the work of the WSCF.
Fourteen national student movements in the United States, including major denominations and the NAACP, participate in the Day of Praise.
Following the service the Lutheran Student association has invited persons attending the meeting to a coffee hour at Trinity church.
Lutheran students will leave tonight to attend a retreat at Gray Rock Estate, Kansas City, Mo.
Lutherans Attend Retreat
Tobeka. Ks.
KC Philharmonic To Appear Monday
The Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra will give a concert at 8:20 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium.
Monday night's program will include the "Water Music Suite" by Handel, the Franck Symphony from "Rosenkavalier" by Richard Strauss and "Sorcerer's Apprentice" by Dukas.
For the third successive year the University Concert course is presenting the orchestra under the direction of its per ductor, Dr Hans Schwieger.
The orchestra was established in 1933, and is now ranked among the top 16 orchestras in the country.
The present season is Mr. Schwiiger's fourth one as music director and conductor of the orchestra. He has appeared with the New York philharmonic, the NBC symphony, the Chicago symphony, the National symphony of Washington and the Houston symphony.
He gave a series of guest appearances with the Berlin Philharmonic orchestra last spring.
Mr. Schwieger was born in Colloge, Germany, where he began his musical education at five.
At 21, he became assistant to Erich Kleiber, then the Berlin State Opera house conductor. After three years, he became conductor at Cassel. The following season he wasductored by the composer Augsberg and in 1932 becamedirector of opera and symphony in Mainz.
At the Conservatory of Cologne, he concentrated on composition and conducting. Simultaneously he studied philosophy at the University of Cologne and later at the University in Bonn.
In 1936 he was general music director for the Free State of Danzig. He gave concerts for six months in Japan.
In 1944 he went to Fort Wayne, Ind., to conduct an amateur orchestra. With his performances, he gained national recognition.
Phi Kappa To Initiate Bishop E. J. Hunkeler
Sunday's carillon program will be played at 3 p.m. by Stanford Lehmberg, college junior.
Mr. Schweiger arrived in the United States in 1938. His first position here was music director in Columbia, S.C. There he organized and conducted the Southern symphony orchestra.
Student To Play Carillon Program
While in Kansas City, one of his major accomplishments was the establishment of the Kansas City Philharmonic Choral society.
Other guests will include the Rev. George Towle, pastor of St. John's Catholic church in Lawrence and chaplain of Epsilon chapter, and the Rev. Charles Aziere, O. S. B., of St. Benedict's college in Atchison.
The program is "Angelus" by Massenet; "The Girl with the Flaxen Hair" by Debussy; "Dido's Lament" by Purcell; "Suite Archaique" for carillon by Clement; "Londonderry Air" (a folk song), and the hymns, "Crown Him with Many Crowns," "Once to Every Man and Nation" and "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God."
The Most Rev. Edward J. Hunkeler, bishop of Kansas City, Kan., will be initiated Sunday as an honorary member of the Epsilon chapter of Phi Kappa, national Catholic social fraternity. The ceremony will be held at the chapter house, 1120 W. 11th street.
Joe P. Wimsatt, business senior and president of Epsilon chapter, said today that the schedule of events includes the introduction of Bishop Hunkeler to alumni at 3 p.m. Sunday, the initiation at 3:30 p.m. a reception at 4 p.m., and a buffet luncheon at 5 p.m.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy
Wimsatt said that the guests will include the Most Rev. Mark K. Carroll, bishop of Wichita and an honorary member of the Iota chapter of Phi Kappa at Kansas State college, Manhattan, and Jerome S. Koehler, Kansas City, Kan., lawyer and former national president of Phi Kappa. Mr. Koehler will present the pin to Bishop Hunkeler.
and the various deans of the University have been invited to attend the ceremony, Wimsatt said.
Bishop Hunkeler was installed as bishop of the Kansas City, Kan., diocese in May, 1951, after the death of the Most Rev. George J. Donnelly. Before that he had been bishop of Grand Island, Neb.
Phi Kappa is a national Catholic social fraternity founded in 1889 at Brown university in Providence, R. I. The fraternity has 32 active chapters.
Epsilon chapter was established at the University in 1915. It was closed during the war years but was reactivated in the spring of 1946. At present 45 men live in the chapter house. The housemother is Mrs. Dana L. Anderson and the advisor is Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism.
Organ Recital In Art Museum Set For Sunday
Prelude in E Flat Major
Otto Meyer, concert organist, will play an organ mass on the baroque organ in the Museum of Art at 4 p.m. Sunday.
The mass, the third part of the 'Klavierubung' by Johann Sebastian Bach, includes the following selections:
The Gloria: God in the highest be praised (trio).
The Kyrie: Kyrie, God, Father in heaven (melody in soprano), Christ, Comforter of the world (melody in tenor), and Kyrie, God, Holy Ghost (melody in bass, 5 voices).
The Creed: We all believe in one God (Fugue).
The Ten Commandments: These are the holy Ten Commandments (melody in canon).
The Lord's Prayer: Our Father who art in heaven.
The Baptism: To the Jordan came Christ our Lord (melody in pedal).
The Holy Communion: Jesus Christ, our Savior (melody in pedal).
FIGURE 15. Mr. Miller, the church music director for the city of Ansbach, Bavaria, is now on a concert tour of the Midwest sponsored by the Kansas City chapter of the American Guild of Organists.
Six University artists are represented in the Joslyn Art Museum's second biennial Midwest Exhibition of Paintings, Sculpture and Graphic Arts which opened Tuesday, Feb. 12, in Omaha.
KU Artists' Works Shown In Omaha
From the total number of entries received, the jury selected for the exhibition a total of 185 paintings, sculpture, prints and drawings by 130 artists. Purchase awards will be made and announced near the close of the exhibition.
University artists represented in the exhibition include: John G. Armstrong, instructor of drawing and painting; Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting; William Dean Eckert, instructor of drawing and painting; John D. Peabody, museum curator; C. Tefft, instructor of design, and Marjorie Whitney, professor of design.
This exhibition is open to artists in a ten state region, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming.
Motorcyclists Need Permits
Motorcyclists must apply for parking permits in the traffic office, Robinson gym, or be subject to a traffic ticket for running Wednesday's Kansan incorrectly said motorcycles may be parked behind Bailey Chemical laboratories.
Jayhawker Deadline For Pictures Feb.18
Any club or honorary organization which would like to have its picture in the third issue of the Jayhawker must contact Bob Garrity, 868, before 4 p.m. Monday. The cost for a full page is $78.75, half-page, $48.75.
Graduating seniors who want their pictures in the fourth issue must have them taken at Hixon's studio before March 15.
PAGE 2
University Daily Kansan
Daily Kansan Editorials
Is UMT Necessary?
There is a lot of talk these days about universal military training, and it probably is only natural that most of the opinions heard around a university are unfavorable to the plan.
A lot of World War II veterans are inlined to regard all this ruckus about deferment by intellect as a farce. They don't remember being deferred for additional education just because they happened to be bright boys. They went into the service and, although most of them didn't like it even a little bit, they stayed in until they were told they could go home to Mamma.
The hubbub about how this country will die off from a lack of technicians unless certain bright lads in certain courses are allowed to continue their schooling sounds ridiculous. There were plenty of equally bright lads who did nothing but carry rifles during the late war; yet the technical progress of this country somehow managed to keep moving without their fine intellects around to aid it.
Students themselves can't even agree on how the government should figure deferments. Some of the ideas expressed in a poll of college students were "if he's trying, let him stay" (in school), "those most interested in their work should be deferred," and "only the better students should be deferred." Graduate students differed from the rest. Twenty-six per cent of them thought no student should be deferred, while only 15 per cent thought all students should be deferred.
Some of those ideas should provide veterans with another big laugh. Probably nothing would make the young campus sports want to try harder for good grades than the prospect of exchanging the sonorous tones of a lecturing professor for the ratchet-like sounds of an irate top sergeant. Likewise, interest in "their work" would increase considerably in the face of this prospect.
No one has explained yet exactly what constitutes a "better student." Any student with anything less than a burning desire to fight would consider himself as one of the "better students" and be mighty unhappy if he wasn't classified accordingly.
The boys who are fighting UMT say there's no reason for it because not many men are needed. Enough men are needed—and have been needed since the brawl in Korea started—to make it necessary for a lot of World War II veterans to get a close look at the highly uninviting Korean countryside.
Our ex-chancellor, Deane W. Malott, sounded off a few days ago against the universal military training program. He said the UMT's six-month training program "would cost billions of dollars, drain off thousands of officers and enlisted men to staff, and provide merely superficial training, inevitably out-moded amid the demands and portents of a possible World War III."
Nobody will dispute the statement that a training program would mean heavy spending. Armies, Navies and Air Forces come pretty high these days.
It may be true that we aren't in a war. These days it isn't a war unless the entire world is involved. What we are in is a "police action." The only drawback is that you can be killed just as dead in Korea as you could in the Battle of the Bulge or on Okinawa.
The six-month training being asked under UMT may be "superficial," as Mr. Malott says. Perhaps it should be 12 months. Nevertheless, the six months of indoctrination would provide a tremendous potential army which could be mobilized more quickly and efficiently than if the bulk of the personnel had received no previous training.
All these arguments about how much it would cost to build adequate national armed forces, and that it is unnecessary because we aren't really at war, have a sinister and familiar ring. They were used right up to the time the Japanese blasted the daylights out of our Pacific fleet at Pearl Harbor. The ships, planes and men that were lost in that attack represented a good-sized investment.
The Pearl Harbor debacle gave the United States an awesome lesson in the matter of unpreparedness. How many of such lessons, how many of our ships, planes and, more important, men, must be blown to pieces before we realize that America isn't populated solely by 150 million ostriches? —J.W.Z.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn, Inland Daily Press Assn,
Associated Press Assn, and The New York Times Assn by the
National Advertising Service, 40 Madison Avenue, New York City.
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
editor-in-Chief Jack Zimmerman
editorial Assistants Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
Editor-in-Chief ... Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants ... Anna Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zehm
*assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lau Fry, Ben Holman,
Joe Lastelic, Jim Powers
City Editor ... Joanne Lambert
*assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newman
Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
*elegraph Editor ... Charles Burch
*assistant Telegraph Editor ... Max Thompson
society Editor ... Diane Stoebraker
*assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Pauline Patterson
ports Editor ... Jackie Jones
news Adviser ... Victor J. Danilov
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
business Manager Dorothy Hartill
advertising Manager Emory McWilliams
ational Advertising Manager Virginia Gibbs
recruitment Manager Ted Barbera
classified Advertising Manager Elaine Mitchell
romotion Manager R. W. Doeus
attention officer R. W. Doeus
Aail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Law-
ence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except
the following months: September, October, November, December and March.
(master Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879)
The Hurricane of Miami university recently presented a self-portrait of the guy who never manages to get to classes on time. Here is how the fellow described himself.
Comments . .
I'm the jerk who always marches into class late. I like to hang around the snake pit or the slop shop, and when the bell rings, I pay it no mind.
"I'm A Jerk". . .
I have no qualms about disrupting a class that has been in session for five or ten minutes. I blithely walk in front of the room, strut in front of the professor, and look about for a seat near one of my friends, meanwhile making as much noise as possible.
After I'm seated comfortably, I ask my neighbors what has happened prior to my arrival, unmindful of the fact that I am annoying others in the room. Then I ask the professor to explain the assignment all over again, as I missed it, thus taking up more valuable class time.
I wouldn't dream of waiting until class was over to ask for any explanations. Yeah, you know me—I'm the jerk.
Students Need Help. . .
The magazine School and Society, in an article on "Comparative College Success of Men and Women," arrives at the following conclusion:
"Further research is sorely needed. But enough research has already been completed to indicate that most students need help in learning to study and to budget their time, that students are apt to flounder around vocationally (and academically) for a long while unless given an opportunity to explore widely through survey courses and vocational information, and that students, too frequently, are left on their own before they have an adequate opportunity to adjust to a new and demanding situation."
The article asks a number of questions, which, it says, might hint at solutions to the problem. Some of these questions are:
How much failure and unhappiness is due to inadequate teaching or an unrealistic standard of excellence?
Is there undue pressure on the male students to participate in campus activities or athletics?
"How realistic are the admission criteria?
Could it be that parents are more interested in a college education for their son than the son is himself?"
Poetry About Football
I think that I shall never see
A coach so good that never he
Does have to worry for his job,
Poem from the College Exponent,
State Teachers college, N. D.
Or try to please the supporting mob
Of fans and students and business men
Who want the team to win again. They have a 10 game winning streak
They lost but one—who is up the creek?
Though they had lost to a better team.
It is the coach that's off the beam.
Walt Whitman, the poet, visited Lawrence in September 1879. Some of his other stops in Kansas included Topeka, Atchison, Wallace and Sterling.
The first three members of the first supreme court to serve in Kansas territory were Samuel D. Lecompte, chief justice, and Saunders W. Johnston and Rush Elmore, associate justices. They are known to have met as a supreme court as early as July 30, 1855.
KEN COLLINS
"Oh Bruno, you shouldn't have . . . Wait a minute! These aren't the ones I picked out!"
Arab League A Potential Ally
The hopes of the democratic world for presenting a united front against aggression in the Near East lie in the Arab league.
In March, 1945, the league's seven founder nations signed a pact which stated that the primary object of the league was to strengthen the ties of brotherhood and to co-operate for the furtherance of Arab interests.
For years the seven nations, Iraq, Trans-Jordan, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Yemen stuck puritically to the premise of a foreign policy based on the narrow interests of Arab nationalism.
The crisis of the league occurred with the defeat of Arab armies by Israel in the fighting of 1948-49. The league defied the United Nations and staged a seven-month war against Israel and lost the decision. It emerged a wiser league, however, being convinced that it was neither economically or culturally capable of waging war on a modern scale.
The Arab leaders had their chance to re-establish lost prestige when the Korean crisis appeared. But Egypt took a hasty lead in failing to support the security council's resolution on Korea and was not followed in its move by the other league members. A dismounted front resulted and the chance was lost.
As tension in the Near East has increased, the awareness of the Arab league also has increased. They no longer think in terms of collective Arab security. They have abandoned their previous aloof attitude toward the cold war and have put themselves alongside the democracies.
Arab nationalism is demonstrating an awakening based on common language, culture, history and geography. This renewed fervor does not, however, imply a wholly self-centered attitude. Although an isolationist policy would be very favorable to the Arab nations, which need a chance to build, it is not a feasible plan and the nations realize it.
The Arab leaders recognize their dangerous geographical position and are sparing no effort to overcome the danger of an international crisis.
For more than a quarter of a century the Arab nations have aspired to freedom and unity. Their potential is great and if the Western powers can aid in the attainment of these goals they will have a powerful ally against the forces of aggression.
—Roger Yarrington.
At present the Arab league countries are sympathetic with Western policies but cannot readily participate in their advancement because of deep-rooted suspicions and fear. Several of the league countries have strong resentments toward Britain and France, and they are looking with a searching eye at the United States. They have come to hate imperialistic nations and will proceed with caution.
News From Other Campuses
He stresses memorizing over a long period of time, concentration and a review system based on the curve of forgetting. He suggests doing this by the daily reading of the recent pages in the student's notebook.
Arrange your study schedule by the speed with which you forget if you wish to get the most out of studying, advises Prof. James D, Weinland of New York university's School of Commerce.
In a survey of the health interests of 500 men and 500 women at Santa
In a list of 50 health items, men placed their interests in the first five items in this order: sex instruction, lifelong care of the eyes, tobacco and human health, causes of mental illness and preparation for marriage
Barbara college, Dr. Joseph Lantagne found that men were more concerned with exercise and safety and women with family health.
The corresponding five items given first rank by the women were: Causes of mental illness, lifelong care of the eyes, sex instruction, preparation for marriage and juvenile delinquency.
University Daily Kansan
PAGE 3
Law Degrees Earned By 12
Twelve men were graduated from the School of Law at the end of the fall semester, Dean Frederick J. Moreau has announced.
Those receiving the bachelor of laws degree are Richard Lyle Ashley, Chanute; James Robert Barr and A. A. Perkins, Lawrence; William John Conroy, Beloit.
James L. Grimes Jr., Kansas City Mo.; Ralph George Henley, Sedalia Mo.; Norman Gall Maben, Wichita; John Rarig Oliver, Culver; Arthur Eugene Rudd, Mullinville; Russell Alfred Stanley, Cunningham; James Frederick Swoyer Jr., Oskalosa, and Roderick Edward Weltmer, Mankato.
Zoologist Gives Conservation Paper
Dr. Frank Cross, instructor in zoology, read his paper on "The Development of a Fish Population in Canton Reservoir" at the sixth Oklahoma Conservation conference held Feb. 8 to 10 at Oklahoma A&M college. Stillwater, Okla.
The paper was the result of a three-year study made at the Canton, Okla, reservoir, a 5,000 acre army engineer flood control lake. The purpose of the study was to find how a lake could be made to produce more game fish for a longer period of time.
A study of fish population by numbers and proportion was started in 1948 and carried out through 1950.
Dr. Cross said that in one particular three acre cove there were 425,000 White Crappie fish caught during February and March of 1950. By studying the favorable conditions suitable for their inductions were formed as to how the lake as a whole could be made more productive.
Dr. Cross said that most new lakes are very good for game fish for several years but after that the success tends to fall off. This, he said, is due not to too few fish but to insufficient food. His study presented recommendations for producing a more constant supply of game fish.
Safe Too Much To Handle
Louisville, Ky.—(U.P.)—Transportation of a 1,400-pound safe proved too much for burglars here. They got the safe out of a window of a motor company but when they tried to make off with it in an automobile the car bogged down on a mud road.
Don't Delay Any Longer . . .
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Friday, Feb. 15, 1952
Use Of Audio-Visual Aids In Classes Greatly Increased Since Last Year
Increased interest on the part of faculty members and students, plus a wider selection of college level films and filmstrips has resulted in this rapid growth at KU. About 50 per cent of KU teachers are now making some use of audio-visual aids in presenting class material.
The use of audio-visual aids in University classes has increased greatly since last year, reported the first instance of theamous audio-visual aids program.
Last July a separate section was created in the Bureau of Visual Instruction to provide audio-visual courses at university classes and local organizations.
Audio-visual materials are accessible in most subject-matter areas. Films and filmstrips are available for preview at the request of faculty members.
All audio-visual equipment, films, filmmats and slides can be obtained for class use by any faculty member. Films or filmmats not available on CU are rented or purchased from other university or commercial libraries.
Organizations may have the same service at a nominal charge.
Winter wheat first appeared in Kansas when 100 acres were sown at the Shawnee Methodist mission in northeastern Johnson county in the fall of 1839.
Birmingham, Ala., (U.P.)-P e a c e and rest for jangled nerves is the cure that a vibrating bed designed by John V. Henderson gives.
"Although the use of audio-visual materials at the university level has increased rapidly the past few years, we are a long way from making the maximum use of these aids," Mr. Atha said.
Vibrating Bed Relaxes Nerves
Since then, he has tried it out many times. One woman said she could relax and sleep for the first time in years. A doctor said it knocked his wife's high pulse down 25 points.
Henderson said that the vibrating bed which he originally designed out of necessity when his wife's back required massaging continually, vibrates at the rate of 600 shakes every minute.
He said he forgot about the improvised massaging method for some 30 years. Then he suddenly moved in while in a hotel bed on a business trip.
Goodland, the county seat of Sherman county, was located and surveyed in September 1887 and was named by one of its promoters for Goodland, Ind.
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PAGE 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 15, 1952
John Keller To Be Cage Starter For Kansas
John Keller, 6 feet 3 inch senior, will be the only change in the starting lineup when the Kansas Jayhawkers meet Nebraska in Hoch auditorium, Saturday night. Tipoff time is 7:35.
Keller will replace ailing Bih Lienhard at forward in the Jayhawker lineup, Coach F. C. Phog Allen said.
"He's done such a swell job for us during the past two seasons, and he's earned the starting assignment."
Other than Keller, the lineup will include Dean Kelly and Bill Hougland—ready to go again after batting a wrenched knee—at guard, Joe Lavelle at center and Billy Kenney at the other forward position.
Too short for a university ball center, Keller has proved a "very valuable man" for the Jayhawkers at forward. Allen said.
Keller made his best showing this year against Kansas State and Iowa State. At Ames, Feb. 12. Keller moved into the post position after Lovellette and B. H. Born went out on fouls.
The game itself will be "a typical Kansas-Nebraska game," the Jayhawk coach said.
"Nebraska's got a good chance," he said, "and if we're not up for this one we're going to get into a lot of trouble."
Dr. Allen, is not too disappointed with his team's showing in the past few games, but said "they aren't convincing enough. We'll have to
be more convincing if we're going to stay in the conference race."
If KU can get through its remaining conference games without a loss, Allen thinks the team has "a very good chance to beat Kansas State," when the Wildcats come to Lawrence, Thursday, March 7.
Still remaining on the KU schedule are conference games with Nebraska, Saturday, Missouri at Lawrence, Monday, Feb. 25, and Oklahoma at Norman, Saturday, March 1.
But at present, all attention is focused on the Cornhuskers who came within three points of the Jayhawkers in their meeting Jan. 14.
In that game, it was necessary for Kansas to stall out the last 65 seconds to win.
Cage Scores
St. John's 59, St. Bonaventure 56
Holly Cross 81, Springfield 61
Birmingham So. 80, Jacksonville 72
Notre Dame 76, Depaul 70
Marquette 58, Toledo 52
NYC 67, Niagara 56
Carnegie Tech 74, Thiel 51
Rhode Island 96, Massachusetts 72
Lovellette Not Interested In Playing Professional Ball
Clyde Lovellette, KUs 6 feet 9 inch court great, said that if he doesn't go to the Phillips 66 Oilers of the AAU, he isn't going anyplace else—especially not to the professional ranks.
And while rumors concerning his basketball future with the Oilers still hover over Mt. Oread, they'll have to remain as rumors.
Lovelette said he'd "rather not make a statement now" as far as he and the Oilers are concerned. Things are too indefinite, he said.
Asked what his plans for the future are if he doesn't go to Bartlesville to play with the Oilers, Clyde said he may go into police work of some kind.
So if he decides to go to Phillips—and there's little reason to think they wouldn't like to have him as much now as they did earlier in the year—or if he chooses the detective line instead, it still leaves an unanswered question. What about his disc iockey show on WREN?
"We'll (Lovellette and Max Falkenstein, sports director at WREN) keep that show going as long as the public likes it," Lovellette said. Lovellette expects Bob Kurland, 7 foot center of the Oilers, to take "at least a season off" from his basketball duties.
Reports have it that Kurland is ready to settle down on his recently purchased six-acre suburban tract.
After the game
9
REFRESH YOURSELF
The national individual basketball scoring lead was taken away from Clyde Lovellette this past week for the first time this season.
Kansas Cager Falls To Third
REFRESH YOURSELF
at the
HAWK'S NEST
COFFEE – ROLLS – SANDWICHES
FRENCH FRIES – FOUNTAIN ORDER
CANDY – CIGARETTES
Lovellette fell to the third spot, behind Mark Workman of West Virginia and Bobby Petit of Louisiana State. These players are in a virtual tie for the scoring lead with 25.944 and 25.941 averages.
The latest figures released Thursday by the National Collegiate Athletic bureau, show that Lovellette's 13 points against Iowa State Monday, dropped his average to 25.4.
Bob Kenney, also from Kansas,
continues to dominate the nation's
leaders at the free throw line. He is now averaging 85.9 per cent.
The All-American center has now scored 458 points on 179 field goals and 100 successful attempts at the free throw line.
Other players in the top ten scorers are Darling of Iowa, Groat of Duke, Retherford of Baldwin-Wallace, Selvy of Furman, Meineke of Dayton, Vance of Mississippi State and Hagan of Kentucky.
Oklahoma Swimmers To Meet KU Saturday
The Kansas swimming team will face its toughest opponent of the season, when the Oklahoma Sooners invade Robinson pool at 2 p.m. Saturday.
Sam Perkins, business junior, is another of the better prospects on the Jayhawk team. He defeated Nebraska and Colorado A&M in the last meet with a 2:30 in the 220-yard free style and also took first against A&M with a 5:30 in the 440-yard free style.
Coach Walt Mikols has little hope that his young team will be able to defeat the powerful Oklahoma squad, but he expects the Jayhawkers to improve their own time records.
The Kansas 400-yard free style relay team of Mahlon Ball, John Ashley, Dick Eftin and Robert Wellborn turned in a 3:58.5 in the Nebraska meet, and they should have a good clocking in their home pool.
Several of the Kansans show considerable promise, and should turn in excellent times. Dick Effin is one of Coach Mikels' best prospects. He defeated Nebraska last Saturday in the 100-yard free style with a 57:6, and against Colorado he did the 150-yard individual medley in 1:48.1.
The most outstanding member of the Oklahoma team is Graham Johnston, a free style sensation, from Bloemfontein, South Africa. He is the British Empire 1,500 meters champion, and has recently swam the 220 free style in 2:13.9 and the 440 in 4:48.9 in the 25-yard Oklahoma pool.
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University Daily Kansan
PAGE 5
Track Squad Faces Huskers In Saturday Meet
The Kansas track squad will journey to Lincoln, Neb. Saturday night to meet the Huskers in a dual indoor meet.
The Jayhawkers have already notched one victory this season with a win over Kansas State in their new fieldhouse last Saturday, and Coach Bill Easton's squad is favored to win again.
The Kansas team is paced by some of the top middle and distance runners in the country and they should set some new records in the meet.
Herb Semper, Jayhawker national cross country champion, should have little trouble in the 2-mile. Cliff Abel holds the present record of 9:33.4 which he set in 1950, and Semper ran the distance in 9:26.1 in the Kansas-Kansas State meet.
The oldest of these which has stood since 1940 is the mile run, Harold Brooks stepped it in 4:22.1 but in the Kansas-Kansas State dual meet, Wes Santee did the mile in 4:17.9.
Santee also bettered Pat Bowers mark of 1:56.9 when he ran the go in 1:56.
The Jayhawker relay team also bettered the record time when the baton exchangers spun around the new K-State track in 3:26.2. Nebraskan Harry Meginnis, Leonard Kehl, Wendell Cole and Harold Kopf hold the present mark at 3:29.4.
On the basis of their performance in the K-State meet, several other members of the Kansas squad should turn in excellent performances.
Jim Floyd has been steadily improving in the pole vault, and should make a good showing.
In the 60-yard high hurdles, Bob DeVinney and Don Woodson should give the Kansas team considerable strength. DeVinney took the hurdles in .7.7 against Kansas State.
In the shot-put, where Kansas has not been too strong in past seasons, there are several men who should come through with the needed points.
Larry Marsh, Galen Fiss, and Merlin Gish are the top Jayhawk performers in this event.
I-M Basketball Advances Into Final Rounds Of Playoffs
There were several close games in the action Thursday, but only one upset.
Stephenson and the Feather Merchants advanced to the semifinals in men's intramural basketball in the Independent "A" playoffs.
In the second round of play at Robinson annex, Stephenson upset previously undefeated Oread hall, 37-32. The winners took the lead midway through the second quarter and were never stopped. Oread closed the gap to 3 points with a minute and a half remaining, but Stephenson stalled the ball until the final buzzer.
Walt Haskins led Stephenson with 10 points. Dave Heilman and Bill Pollock had 12 and 10 points respectively for Oread.
The Feather Merchants came from behind to take the lead in the final quarter of their game with Varsity house, and went on to win 46-42.
Gil Reich paced the Feather Merchants offense with 22 points on 9 goals from the field and 4 conversions at the line. Oliver Spencer was high point man for Varsity house with 10 points.
Phi Gamma Delta advanced to the finals in the Fraternity 'B' class,
A driving layup shot in the final 6 seconds of play gave Beta Theta Pi a close 39-38 victory over Phi Delta Theta.
Dick Docking led Beta with 11 points, while Ray Beers and Burwell Shepard had 12 and 10 points for the Phi Delt's.
Phi Gamma Delta scored a 38-32 win over Delta Upsilon in the other Fraternity "B" game.
Harlan Hise led the Phi Gamma attack with 10 points, but it was DU's Merle Hodges who gained top scoring honors with 15 points.
Varsity house and AFROTC advanced to the finals in the Independent "B" class.
Friday, Feb. 15, 1952
Varsity house defeated Jolliffe 35-26 in a rough contest. Orville Poppe led the Varsity attack with 15 points.
In the other Fraternity "B" game, AFROTOC was awarded a 2-0 decision over Williams because an earlier season had been used earlier in the season.
Nu Sigma Nu, Lambda Chi, and Phi Delta Theta advanced to the same finals of the Fraternity. "C" actions with victories in Thursday's action.
Nu Sigma Nu defeated Alpha Tau Omega 28-23, and Lambda Chi defeated Beta Theta Pi 35-33 in a close game.
John Fulkerson was high point man forLambda Chi with 9 points.
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while Alden Brownlee totaled 10 for Beta.
Round-Up
In the final game of the evening Phi Delta Theta scored an easy 47-32 win over Phi Kappa Psi. Tom Ryther led the Phi Delt scoring with 15 points.
Phone 646
Intramural
Saturday Independent "A" 2:00
Stephenson vs. Phi Beta Pi 2.00
Feather Merchants vs. Dark Horses
Fraternity "C"
Phi Gamma Delta_vs. Phi Theta Pi
2.00
Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Nu Sigma Nu Monday Fraternity "4"
Beta Theta Pl vs. Delta Upsilon
**Independent "A"**
Winners of Saturday's games
Fraternity "B"
Beta Theta Pi vs. Phi Gamma Theta Independent "B"
8:19 Varsity House vs. AFROTC
Tractor Chain Snares Child
Kouts, Ind.-(U.P.)-Four-year-old Elizabeth Werner was injured by a chain attached to a tractor when it wrapped around her and squeezed her. Elizabeth was holding the end of the chain and her father. Elmer Werner was driving the tractor in the barnyard of the home.
New York—(U.P.)-National league pitchers—this and weep:
Stan Musial Signs At Own Pay Rate
Stan Musial has signed his 1952 St. Louis Cardinal contract. Worse still, he says he has "several more peak years ahead."
Even Cardinal owner Fred Saigh didn't attempt to battle it out with the Storm team batting champion. He just handed him a blank check and told him to fill it in.
Stan, a somewhat bashful fellow,
decided his 1951 pay was good
enough and wrote in a flat salary of
$75,000 plus a clause that figures
to give him an extra $5,000 on an
attendance basis.
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PAGE 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 15, 1952
Official Bulletin
Faculty Forum. Monday noon. Faculty club, "Universal Military Training."
CORRECTION - Campus Affairs meeting, Wednesday, Feb. 20, 222 Strong.
Danforth chapel service, 8:30 a.m.
Sunday, sponsored by Gamma Delta
Gamma Delta cost supper. 5:30
pm. Sunday, 17th and Vermont
streets. Group discussion. "Universal
Military Training."
Lutheran Student association,
cost supper. 6:30 p.m. Sunday, 13th
and New Hampshire streets. Attend
in a group Universal Day of
Prayer.
STARTS TODAY FOR 1-BIG WEEK-1
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DECISION BEFORE DAWN
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Christian Group Hears Pastor
Dr. R, L. Decker of Kansas City, Mo., spoke at the weekly meeting of Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship Thursday. Dr. Decker is executive director of the National Association of Evangelicals and pastor of the Temple Baptist church in Kansas City.
University Club To Give Supper
The University club will have a covered dish supper at 6:30 p.m. tonight in the club room. A Sweetheart dance will follow.
Chappaqua, N. Y.—(U.P.)-A New York Central railroad station agent warned several well-dressed commuters today that he had taken motion pictures of them while they were raiding the "honor system" change box on his unattended newspaper stand.
Movies Catch New York Commuters Raiding 'Honor System' Change Box
Soft-spoken George A. Williams, 34, requested his "silent partners" to make restitution promptly. Otherwise, he would show the film publicly without charging admission.
"I'm not going to take legal action," Williams said. "I don't think I'll have to if they have any pride."
Williams said the pilfering of pennies from his newstand had been going on for several years. Recently some commuters in this tony Westchester county community had been swiping dimes and quarters.
Each morning he placed the metropolitan newspapers on a table and provided a coin box for those who
I had to make change.
When his losses reached the $12-a week rate, Williams sawed a hole in the ceiling above the table and stationed an assistant there to watch the coin-changing activity during the busy hours.
The assistant told him he saw well-to-do commuters who take the 7:43 am, express to New York drop nickels and dimes in the change box and take out dimes and quarters. Williams said he, too, spied on the guilty commuters from the peephole.
He acquired a motion picture camera and took "movies" of the thefts.
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University Daily Kansan
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AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for business or personal. Downs Phone: Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book your vacation during summer. Call Miss Glesman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-769-5210.
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING_DONE promptly and accurately. Bring to Mrs. Merritt at 1409 Rhode Island, 2nd floor apartment, or call 267J0. 20
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop. 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biologi- reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. J. Coo8, 388 Ls Aa. 4. upstairs. Mrs. J. 275J,
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JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their services include a pet shop. let us know everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and fur Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418.
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MISCELLANEOUS
Friday, Feb. 15. 1952
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
tion agents buyers. William J. V.
Aspen 31108.
REAL
Remarks
Alpa
Wesley Foundation To See Christian Federation Film
Religious Notes
A film, "That All May Be One," the story of the World Student Christian federation, will be shown at the Wesley foundation meeting from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the First Methodist church, 946 Vermont street.
The group will also attend the Universal Day of Prayer services sponsored by the KU Student Religious council at the Trinity Lutheran church, 1245 New Hampshire street.
Several Newman club members have been asked to form an honor guard for the Bishop who will be opening for Katrine on Friday, a session to administer confirmation.
Newman Club Members Form Honor Guard For Bishop
The group meets every Sunday after the 10 a.m. Mass. The first Sunday of every month is a business day, so meetings are scheduled at the first meeting in March.
Father Robert, of the White Fathers, a missionary for 25 years in Central Africa, spoke at the Newman meeting last Sunday.
Jutheran Student Councils To Have Retreat In Missouri
The old and new executive councils of the Lutheran Student association will spend Friday and Saturday at the Greyrock estate in Blake, NY. Over last year's program and planning their work for the coming year.
Chaplain for the weekend will be the Rev. Richard Albert. Richard Pries, graduate student, will give the kevnote address.
Material presented at the Midwest regional workshop at Manhattan last weekend also will be discussed at the retreat. Eleven schools in Kansas and Nebraska were represented at the conference. The theme was "Why LSA?" Twenty-two members of the KU LSA attended. Peggy Allison, education junior, and William Spomer, college sophomore, were workshop leaders.
The regular Sunday evening meeting will be held at 6 p.m. in the parish hall, 1245 New Hampshire street. The group will attend the Universal Day of Prayer services sponsored by the KU Student Religious council at 7:15 p.m. at the Lutheran church.
Gamma Delta Panel To Lead Military Training Discussion
Members of Gamma Delta, national Lutheran student organization, will hear a five-student panel explain and lead a discussion on the interpersonal military training at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lutheran church.
Gamma Delta will continue to sponsor Sunday services at 8:30 a.m. in Danforth chapel, the Rev. Norman Brandt said. These services are open to all KU students.
The student-led Bible class at 9:30 a.m. Sundays in Myers hall will also continue throughout the second semester. The class is presently studying the life of Christ according to the Synoptic Gospels.
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KU Disciple Fellowship To Sponsor Coffee Hour
Ph.607
The KU Disciple fellowship will sponsor a get-acquired coffee hour from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Sunday at the First Christian church.
Prof. Alfred L. Baldwin, district supervisor of all Protestant churches in Kansas, will speak to the group from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Myers hall on the "Psychology of Prayer." Devotions will be led by Gregory Fisk, education senior.
The Roger Williams fellowship group will attend a five-college Baptist youth rally in Topeka Sunday. Delegations from Lawrence, Ottawa, Emporia, Manhattan and Topeka will meet at the First Baptist church in Topeka.
Fellowship Group To Attend Five-College Youth Rally
Transportation will be provided. Annette Smith, president, said. Member planning to attend should attend at the church at 3:15 p.m. Sunday.
Golden Egg Becomes Hollywood Star
Hollywood — (U.P.) - An ordinary 5-cent egg got the treatment that some movie starlets spend their life wishing for.
But according to Bud Abbott and Lou Costello the egg is something unusual. It's naturally golden colored. And was just what they needed while filming their last picture, "Jack and the Beanstalk."
The $5000 egg, hatched by a white Leghorn hen owned by a Crescent, Utah, farmer, was presented to Abbott and Costello by the National Egg industry.
The egg got a stand-in. An the two comedians insured what once would have made a good breakfast for $5000 with Lloyd's of London.
Pacific Dairy and Poultry Association assured the golden shell coloring was genuine by having the egg scratched, sandpapered and washed. But the color would not rub off.
So now the little egg is carefully kept under refrigeration until it makes its debut (for publicity purposes) at the premier of the picture.
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
TODAY - SATURDAY
TIM HOLT LAW OF THE
BADLANDS
RKO RADIO
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
TODAY - SATURDAY
TIM HOLT LAW OF THE BADLANDS
RKO RADIO NATIONAL
Co-feature
THE PICTURE
TIM TELLS
THE TRUTH
ABOUT IT!
Columbia Pictures presents
LOUIS DE MOCHEMONT'S Production of
THE WHISTLE AT
EATON FALLS
starring
LLOYD BRIDGES - DOROTHY GISH
Ch. 1 "Roar of the Iron Horse"
SUN. - MON. - TUES.
FLAMING GUNS...FLASHING HOOFs..
JOHNSTON HALL PRESENT
ZANE GREYS
The LIGHToF
WESTERN STARS
Directed ALAN LAADD - RUSSELL HAYDEN
VICIER JONY - JO ANN SAYERS - NOAH BEERY
FAVORITE FILMS presents
Co-feature
"The
ZANE GREY'S
MYSTERIOUS RIDER"
Delt-Tri Delt Tea Dance
Weekend Social Events
Delta Tau Delta fraternity will entertain Delta Delta fraternity with a tea dance from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday at the chapter house. Chaperones will be Mrs. C. H. Wentworth and Mrs. Nelle M. Hopkins.
Campus Pinnings
BUSSELL HAVEN DOUGLAS DUMMELLE
SIKESNE TOLER
Late News Events
Adm. 14c - 50c
Fraternity Housewarming
BOGI, new independent fraternity, will have a housewarming from 8:30 p.m. to midnight Saturday at 745 Ohio street. The chapelones will be Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Green, Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Wilson and Mrs. Harry Ryan.
The KU Westminster fellowship will have a valentine party at 8 p.m. tonight at Westminster house. The party, to which all members of the KU College and their friends are invited, will honor the newlyweds in the group. Martha Thomson, college sophomore, is in charge of arrangements.
Delta Upson fraternity will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Edward Dicks, Mrs. Edna M. Stewart and Mrs. Dana L. Anderson.
Delta Upsilon Dance Tonight
ISA Formal Dance Tonight
Betty Jeanne Dickson, Pi Beta Phi, Wichita, to Buford Bissell, Phil Delta Theta, Great Bend.
FAVORITE
HILLS
CORPORATION
ISA will hold a formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnite tonight at the Community building. The chaperones will be Mrs. R. H. Wilson. Miss Carlotta Nellis and Mrs. R. G. Roche.
Westminster Party Tonight
Virginia Turk, Watkins hall, Kansas City, Kans., to Richard Gruendel, Phi Beta Pi, Kansas City, Kans.
Pat Schrader, Alpha Delta Pi,
Lawrence, to John Cox, Delta Tau
Delta, Lawrence.
EXPOSE OF BIG-TIME CRIME OPERATION!
THE
NOW! ENDS SATURDAY
DARING!
REVEALING!
TIMELY!
EXPOSE OF BIG-TIME CRIME OPERATION!
THE UNKNOWN MAN
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
BROADCAST
WALTER PIDGEON
ANH HARDING
BARRY SULLIVAN
KEEP BRASSELE
Levi STINE - Edward FRANK
Richard ANDERSON - Drew ADAMS
UNKNOWN
MAN
Metro-
Goldwyn-Houg
et al.
Features Tonite: 7:33-9:32
Continuous Sat. from 1 p.m.
Also: Cartoon - News
GRANADA
'Sigma Kappa Party Tonight
Sigma Kappa sorority will hold a party from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. to night at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Mar Younkman, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Faust and Mr. and Mrs. Reginal Strait.
Triangle-AOPi Hour Dance
Alpha Kappa Alpha Dance
KU Disciple Fellowship Party
Triangle fraternity will entertain Alpha Omicron Pi sorority with 4 hour dance from 2 to 3 p.m. Saturday at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Dean S Nite and Mrs. D, I Denham.
The KU Disciple fellowship will have a valentine party from 8 10:30 p.m. tonight at Myers halls Mrs. Carroll D. Clark, student director, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralp Ring will be the chaperones.
Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house The chaperones will be Mrs. Johnson Smothers, Mrs. Dan Standfield and Mrs. Karl White.
Kappa Sigma Dessert Dance
Lambda Chi Dessert Dance
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity ent-
tained Alpha Chi Omega sororit
with a dessert dance Tuesday
at the chapter house.
Kappa Sigma Dessert Dance
Kappa Sigma fraternity entertained Kappa Alpha Theta sorority with a dessert dance from 7 to p.m. Thursday at the chapter house The chaperones were Mrs. Edn M. Stewart and Mrs. Eugene Alford.
Theta Sigma Phi Coke Party
Theta Sigma Phi, honorary jouri
alism sorority, entertained womer
interested in journalism with a valentine's day coke party in the AWS
lounge Thursday afternoon.
Today - Saturday
Prevue Saturday 11:15
SUNDAY
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW book/book CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Ronald Reagan Rhonda Fleming "Hong Kong" Color By Technicolor
LONG AWAITED--LONG TO BE REMEMBERED!
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents BURT LANCASTER FOR TEN TALL MEN
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
WITH JODY LAWRANCE
PAGE 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 15, 1952
2.
Stephenson Becomes Home For 52 Students
By JERRY RENNER
About 25 men moved into Stephenson hall Thursday afternoon. The balance of the 52 students who will live there are scheduled to occupy the hall today.
Finishing touches in the building are not completed but the hall is ready for general living purposes. Cement floors of the rooms have not been covered with linoleum nor the walls painted. This is expected to be completed by the end of the semester. Darrell Rhudy, Stephenson hall proctor, said.
Rooms will accommodate two occupants and contain built-in closets and drawers. Each room has two desks with study lamps, an easy chair, and double deck beds with innerspring mattresses.
The building has three floors and a basement. A recreation room, kitchen, dining, laundry, and storage room are located in the basement. All three third floors house most of the men. Each floor has a telephone and bath.
On the first floor Mrs. Edna Ramage, house mother, has her suite. A large living room with a fireplace and several student rooms are also on this floor.
A University truck transported most of the men's belongings from Oread hall to Stephenson. Men unable to take advantage of the truck's ability to carry boxes, boxes, suitcases and sacks during the afternoon and evening.
The man who made this hall possible was Lyle Stephenson, insurance salesman. One of his slogans with which students from Kansas City probably are familiar was "Leavittole."
Mr. Stephenson never attended the University, but he was a close friend of several professors in the
entomology department. His hobby was entomology and he often went on department field trips.
From his estate the Endowment association was willed $90,000 which at the time the will was made out would have been enough to build and furnish the hall. To this amount it was necessary for the Endowment association to add $70,000.
Irvin Youngberg, secretary of the Endowment association, said construction was delayed almost a year after the settlement of the estate in hope that material costs would go down.
In the fall of 1950 it became obvious that prices would continue to rise and work was begun. Building was held up last summer when floods carried away all the sand needed for cement.
During one period of construction, the hillside slipped and broke a water line. Engineers provided against further slippage by anchoring the building with 12 to 14 foot cement columns which go to solid bed rock.
Mrs. Stephenson specified the hall to be built for undergraduate students. They must have and maintain a 1.5 grade average to live there. Everyone shares the work of housekeeping, cooking, cleaning and similar tasks. Each student works one hour a day.
L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, said students live at Stephenson hall for about $35 a month for room and board.
No formal dedication of Stephenson hall will be held until next fall
Lecturer Says No Red Threat In East Africa
There is no immediate threat of a Communist movement in East Africa now, John B. George of the Institute of Current World Affairs told journalism students Thursday.
Mr. George, who has spent two years in East Africa studying government structure, explained that nothing is oppressive enough yet to cause the people to want to form unions; they will probably be drawn to the writings of Locke and Jefferson, rather than Marx, he said.
"Race or faction relations is the key to the problem," he said. The population is composed of 17 million natives, 50 thousand Europeans and 150 thousand Asiatics, mostly Indian laborers brought in by the British.
East Africa is divided into three territories: Kenya, a colony and protectorate of Great Britain; Uganda, a protectorate, and Tanganyika, a trust under the United States, Mr. George said.
The British colonial policy is to prepare the natives for self-government at the earliest date, but East Africa is not yet ready for independence from Great Britain. Missionary work has been the major influence in education, Mr. George said.
Chancellor Murphy Speaks
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy spoke to the students of Topeka High school at the annual College day assembly today.
Representatives from colleges and universities throughout the nation will be at the high school to advise the students who are contemplating entering college next fall.
'Philip Morris Playhouse' Broadway Offer Is Complete Surprise To Mary Lou Jukes
By BOB NOLD
"The invitation to play in the 'Philip Morris Playhouse on Broadway' caught me completely by surprise." Mary Lou Jukes said.
Don Dixon (assistant professor of speech) phoned me Monday and told me to come right over to the speech and drama office. I thought he probably wanted me to work in the ticket office." Mrs. Jukes said.
"When I got there," she continued,
"Mr. Dixon, along with 'Herk' Harvey, Bill Conboy, and Tom Rea (all instructors of speech) were standing in the room grinning. They told me to sit down. Mr. Dixon began reading the wire.
"I only heard the first words; then I began to shake. I finally managed to say 'Isn't it wonderful?'
"Tom Rea (director of 'The Lady's Not For Burning,' in which she has the ear) answered, Yes, it's just Did you notice the date? I heard!
They wanted her in New York on Feb. 28, the day after "The Lady's Not For Burning" opens at the University.
"We all decided we had to try to adjust the situation," she said. "Mr. Dixon phoned the Philip Morris company in New York. The secretary took the message and said she
would have Mr. Krich, assistant to the producer, call back.
"We got some coffee and waited for the call. When the phone rang, I dived for it. It was New York. I went into the radio room where Mr. Dixon and Mr. Crafton (chairman of the speech and drama department) were talking. Mr. Crafton and I remained in the room afraid to move while Mr. Dixon took the message.
"When he came back, he had a grin on his face. Everything was all right. They agreed to release me for
Jukes To Appear On Show March 16
Mary Lou Jukes, graduate student, will appear in the "Philip Morris Playhouse on Broadway," Sunday. March 16.
The Biow Advertising agency, which represents Philip Morris, wired Thursday requesting Mrs. Jukes to be in New York March 12. She will leave by airplane on the 12th.
she said. "I have never been to New York and have never been on a radio show."
Although I never dreamed I would win an invitation, it is the sort of thing everyone hopes and davdreams about.
"All of us (those who tried out) were on edge the first couple of weeks after the tryouts. I guess we had them to answer immediately."
the production here and to use me on their program at a later date.
--makers objected that it would be "dangerous" to pardon guilty persons in order to induce them to testify. They pointed out that Congress has not given even its own investigating committees such power.
"Every aspect of this is thrilling."
Mrs. Jukes is glad, however, that her appearance on the Playhouse has been postponed. She likes her role of Jennet in the school's third major play. "It's the best part I've ever had," she said.
She said acting was a "full time, leisure time activity" for her. "I had never considered going into acting as a profession," Mrs. Jukes said, adding, "The field is pretty good, and didn't think I would have a chance."
Other reasons she gave for not
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News Roundup
Gas Strike Called Off Union Gains Pay Raise
Wichita—(U.P.)—The threatened gas strike which has hung over five states for the past two weeks was dissipated today when Cities Service Gas company representatives announced they had agreed with the International union of operating engineers on a wage scale.
Glen W. Clark, president of the gas company, announced from his Oklahoma City office that the union would continue to work 48 hours a week with a raise in rates of hourly pay. Clark did not reveal the amount of the raise.
The union agreed to the company's "final offer" after obtaining an affirmative vote among members
Truce Negotiations Nearing Settlement
Pamunjom, Korea (U.P.)—Allied and Communist truce negotiators have reached agreement on nearly every point regarding the exchange of war prisoners except the issue of repatriation, United Nations spokesmen said today.
On that point, the Reds insist stubbornly that all prisoners must be returned regardless of their own preferences.
"In the main, the two sides are close together," a staff officer said. Question of wording except for the question of voluntary repatriation.
At tomorrow's talks the Communists are to present the Allied team with a new proposal on a full-dress Korean peace conference to follow the conclusion of an armistice.
Congress Opposes Immunity Request
Washington — (U.P.) President Truman appeared to be bucking a stone wall today in asking Congress to give Newbold Morris power to grant witnesses immunity from prosecution during the government cleanup campaign.
Democratic and Republican law
HST Still Silent On Future Plans
REPUBLICANS
Mrs. Jukes had her first major role in "She Stoops to Conquer," a
Here are the latest developments in the presidential race.
Warren—Gov. Earl Warren of California said the GOP national convention would be "handcapped" if Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower does not make public his domestic policies.
"My first part in a play at KU was in 'Hamlet,' " she said, adding, "I had six lines and one offstage cry."
Taft—Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio said he "would not advocate an invasion of China (by the Chinese Nationalists) unless the Communist Chinese move into Indo-China either as an army or as 'volunteer'."
Eisenhower—the general's Pers headquarters told the Army he "will be unable to attend" the West Point sesquicentennial which he had been invited to address in April, confirming reports that he is ignorant of current quests to return home soon to speak under "nonpolitical" auspices.
DEMOCRATS
going all-out for acting several years ago were her plans for getting married and her interest in teaching. "I have always wanted to teach a course here in Fundamentals of Speech," she said, "and this semester I am teaching one class in it."
Truman—President Truman left the nation's biggest political puzzler unanswered by declaring the question of running for reelection is "a matter of chance to make it, but he will announce it himself, not "through a third person."
Mrs. Jukes said she had obtained most of her dramatic training here, "I have always loved acting," she said, "but this is the first school I attended that went all out for it.
Kefauver—Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee said he favored a personal presidential envoy to the White House rather than a full-fledged ambassador.
road show she was in during her junior year.
Her next two major parts were last year as Irma, the waitress, in "The Mad Woman of Chaillot," and as Tatiana, fairy queen, in "Mid-summer Night's Dream." The last play was a road show which toured southeastern Kansas and played in three Oklahoma towns. It was the first time a production had been taken out state.
"This touring is probably the closest we have come to professional experience," she said.
Mrs. Jukes said her husband, Richard H. Jukes, engineering senior, is as excited as she is.
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Women To Take Men To Dance Friday Night
Women are requested to pay for the tickets to the Leap Year dance to be held from 8 p.m. to midnight Friday. Feb. 29 in the Hawk's Nest.
The dance is sponsored by the Associated Women Students and all proceeds will go to the AWS Memorial Scholarship fund.
Tickets for the sweater and skirt dance are on sale in women's organized houses at 50 cents a couple. Checkers and cards will be available for those not wanting to dance. Music, except for intermission, will be furnished by records.
The Dead Beats, faculty orchestra that made its debut at the Faculty Follies last December, will provide intermission entertainment.
Included in the combo are Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology; Lawrence S. Bee, professor of home economics and gender; Henkel Hitt, registrar; Kenneth E. Rose, associate professor of mining engineering.
C. F. Weinau, professor of petroleum engineering; Karel Blaas, assistant professor of musical theory; Charles Oldfather, assistant professor of law; Leo Horacek, instructor in musical education; E. O. Stene, professor of political science, and Raymond Zepp, instructor in band.
2 Students Get Scholarships
Two graduate students have been given work scholarships in Kansas City by the veterans' administration since the psychiatric social work training program was accredited ten days ago, Miss Esther Twente, professor of social work, announced today.
"There is a much greater demand than supply for psychiatric social workers in the nation today," Miss Twente said. "In fact, there is a greater demand than supply for all social workers."
There are now eight students enrolled in the psychiatric social work program, but Miss Twente expects an increase in the enrollment since the program is accredited.
In the spring semester, the first year graduate in social work takes a six-month field placement in a social work agency in Kansas City, Topeka, or Wichita. The second year is spent at the University School of Medicine at Kansas City.
The newly accredited psychiatric program is one of 27 such programs in the United States. The United States Public Health service has made funds available in developing this new program at the University.
C. J. H. Larson
DR. HANS SCHWIEGER
Concert In Hoch At 8 p.m. Today
The Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra, under the direction of Dr. Hans Schwieger, will give a concert at 8:20 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
The program includes the "Water Music Suite" by Handel, "Symphony in D Minor" by Cesar Franck, "Suite from Rosenkavaler" by Richard Strauss and "Sorcerer's Apprentice" by Dukas.
ID cards will admit students.
This season is Dr. Schwierig's fourth as director of the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra. He has appeared with the New York philharmonic, the NBC symphony, the Chicago symphony, the National Symphony of Washington and the Houston symphony.
Twenty-five language-art majors in the School of Education have been accepted as junior members of the National Council of Teachers of English.
25 Students Join Council Of Teachers
Those accepted are Charlene Smades, Dolores Martin, Lucile Hart, Maxine LeRow, Jacqueline Starrett, Doris McCormick, Joyce Horalek, Gene Davidson, Russell Annis, Stewart Newlin, Norma Strobel, Robert Geiger, Helen Smith, Betty Koonse, Joseph Kindl, Cladoaldo Lecadio, Dana D胡kins, Carla Haber, Lorraine Mather, Jannih Lewis, Louise Koppers, Marese Ball, Kenneth Wegner, Wilbur Goodseal, and James E. Phillips.
Membership results in two distinct advantages: they receive a subscription to the English Journal and are allowed to purchase all publications of the National Council at half price during their period of junior membership.
The purpose of joining the organization is to acquaint the student with professional material for teachers of English. The national organization emphasizes the publication of recent, up-to-date techniques and materials for the junior high and senior high school-English teacher.
The same group of students have joined the Kansas Association of Teachers of English, a state unit of the national council.
The monthly meeting of the College faculty will be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Strong auditorium.
College Faculty To Meet
Daily Kansan
49th Year, No. 91 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday,Feb.18,1852
5 European Specialists To Visit University
The five are alien employees of the United States Information service who are visiting this country under an orientation program sponsored by the state department.
Those who will visit KU are Marie Therese Barreau, press assistant in Paris, France; Albert H. Roche, press assistant in Brussels, Belgium; Per Amby, editor from Copenhagen, Denmark; Aino Niskanen, motion picture assistant from Helsinki.
Five European specialists in the field of press, radio, motion pictures and libraries will visit the University Tuesday through Saturday as part of a two month investigation into the American way of life.
The program includes experience in government offices in New York and Washington and two months travel in the United States. The purpose of the program is to bring key U. S. government employees in other countries to America so that they may gain a better understanding of the United States, its people, and how they live. As it is, many alien government employees have only book knowledge and second hand information.
Move Capital To Smith Center, Grad Says
Finland, and A. Philippe Vos, chief of press publications in Bern, Switzerland.
KU Republicans Elect Officers
Cliff Ratner, college senior, has been elected chairman of the Young Republicans.
New cabinet officers selected are Roy Bennett, first year law student, vice-president; Dorothy Lee Wandling, college sophomore, secretary, and Glenn Opie, first year law student, treasurer.
He said that one of the reasons for originally using Washington was to get away from mobs of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Balti-
A former graduate of the University has a unique hobby. He wants to shift the site of the nation's capital from Washington to Smith Center.
Henry Castle, '14, he enlisted the aid of Wint Smith, '20, (R.-Ks.), who represents the country's geographic center in Washington. He has given Smith maps and data which support his theory that the time he would for a change due to eastward march of the population center.
Mr. Smith, Republican congressman from Kansas, believes that by moving the capital it would be free of pressure groups and business controls of New York and other Eastern influences.
Washington now is approximately 1,200 miles east of the geographic center, and more than 600 miles east of the population center. In other words, it has located in Washington it was only 60 miles east of the population center.
Fry Springs To Foreground As Top English Dramatic Poet
The play was first released for amateur production last month, and he University of Kansas is one of the first to give it.
Christopher Fry, author of "The Lady's Not For Burning," has in a few years sprung into the position of a foremost dramatic poet in the English language.
But nobody saw Mr. Fry. Star John Gielgud came out and said, "Christopher Fry, the author, is too shy, spy, and fly to appear, but asks me to thank you for him."
Mr. Fry writes beautifully, rolling out speeches packed with imagery. He tacks humor onto the end of some of the longest and most flowery speeches. He is romantic and humorous by turns.
Mr. Fry's first recognition as a serious playwright came in 1946 with "A Phoenix Too Frequent," which he directed and starred in the theater productions this semester.
"The Lady's Not For Burning" which begins in Fraser theater Wednesday, Feb. 27, has been termed by New York critics as Mr. Fry's best play to date.
It is a whimsical fable about a cynical ex-soldier who reluctantly falls in love with an enchanting young woman sentenced to be burned as a witch.
The influence of the Elizabethan theater is evident in "The Lady's Not For Burning," from its blank verse to its varied sets of lovers and a loquacious clown. The cadenced lines of the play are full of metaphors and epigrams.
The opening of "The Lady's Not For Burning" in London was a grand success, and the fall of the final curtain was followed by cries of "Author! Author!"
Because he is one of the shvest men in London, Mr. Fry is an almost anonymous celebrity. Now in his early forties, he has devoted half his life to the theater. At various times, he has been a cartoonist, a schoolmaster, a private in the Army, and a composer.
One drawback Smith sees in Castle's plan is the lack of hotels, transportation and other utilities in Smith Center. But Castle believes that by starting from the ground an "American type" capital could be created.
more.
Smith said that Congress has the power to move the capital, but added that the plan does not seem plausible in the near future since the Eastern population centers have enough members of Congress to block it. He does, however, see the time when they would lose that advantage.
Postal Head Dies Of Heart Attack
Raymond C. Abraham, superintendent of the University Postal station, died today of a heart attack.
He was 69 years old and lived at 607 Stratford road.
Born Dec. 7, 1883, Mr. Abraham was graduated from the University in 1911. He began working in the postal service in 1914 and had been superintendent of the University station since 1922.
Mr. Abraham reported for work today and became ill about 9:30 a.m. After resting in his office he was taken home. He died twenty minutes later.
Museum Curator To Edit Bulletin
Dr. Tordoff was elected editor of the magazine at the last annual meeting of the Wilson Ornithological club in Davenport, Iowa. Dr. Keith Ferguson was associate editor of the Museum of Natural History, was elected associate editor.
He is survived by his wife
Dr. Harrison Tordoff, assistant curator of the Museum of Natural History, will begin editorship this week of the Wilson Bulletin, quarterly ornithology magazine.
The bulletin covers primarily Mid-western ornithology.
Castle, who was born in St. Joseph, Mo., entered Oxford university on a Rhodes scholarship after graduating from KU. He lives in Washington, D.C.
Professor To Attend 'Tourist Meeting'
Dr. John C. Frye, executive director of the State Geological survey at the University, will attend an off-road "tourist meeting" in Topeka today.
Dr. Fryre is one of five state officials appointed by Governor Edward F. Arn to serve on a recently created "governor's special commission on scenic, historic, and recreational points of interest."
Charles D. Stough, state representative from Douglas county, who spoke at a recent meeting, said "Tm for Eisenhower, but I'll support any candidate the Republican party runs for president."
The commission will meet jointly with the tourism promotion council of the Stats Commission.
Dr. Frye is associate professor of geology.
"You young people have one thing in common with me," Representative Stough contended, "We have never been able to vote for a Republican who won the presidency."
Calling Kansas a battleground for this year's election, Mr. Stough reminded his listeners that Kansas has both a favorite son in General Eisenhower, and a lot of supporters for Senator Taft.
"It would look bad if Eisenhower were to come home for the election and find Kansas in a divided condition," he said.
Mr. Stoug added that in the past few years emphasis everywhere has been away from politics and government. "As long as people keep an interest in politics, there will continue to be corruption in government," he said.
The Republicans, he continued,
have approximately a 12 million
vote handicap to overcome, which
was built up in the last 20 years.
"In order to do this, it behooves the
Republicans to get out the independent vote next time," he said.
KU To Sponsor Annual Clerks School Feb. 21-22
A section on problems of third-class cities is included in the two-day program for the second annual City Clerks school Thursday and Friday at the University.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will welcome the group at the opening session. Albert B. Martin, attorney for the Kansas League of Municipalities, will report on special legislation in Kansas, and Dr Frederic H. Guild, research director for the legislative council, will report on a study of mill rate limits. Both men are from Topeka.
First-day meetings for third-class cities personnel will take up municipal budget making, special operating problems, utility accounting and billing, and relations between third-class cities and townships and counties.
Wigglesworth, Lawrence; Dwight Metzler, chief engineer, state board of health, and Howard W. Hallman and Vernon Koch, KU bureau of government research.
Meanwhile clerks from first- and second-class cities will study state aid to cities, what a manager expects from the clerk, capital improvement budgeting, and municipal sewage pollution abatement.
instructors will be Mrs. Mildred LeSeur, Douglas county budget director; City Manager James H.
The second day's program will begin with Prof. William Moreland, Fort Hays Kansas State college, discussing municipal government as the citizen sees it. Municipal bond transcripts will be explained by William P. Timmerman, Topeka, from the office of the state's attorney general. Harold Horn, assistant city manager, El Dorado, will explain procedures for making a municipal improvement.
Subjects for the concluding session will be emergency warrants, municipal financial reporting, "The Man on the Other Side of the Counter," and elections and registrations. Lecturers will be Dr. Ethan P. Allen, Dr. Edwin O. Stene, Dr. James W. Drury and Howard Hallman, all of the KU staff.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan
Monday, Feb. 18, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
A
Arnall's Acceptance Of Job As Price Chief Is Mystery
Ellis Arnall, new price stabilization chief, is taking over a tough job. The question of the hour seems to be, "Why is he accepting the position?"
Former chief Mike DiSalle, who is quitting to run for the Democratic senatorial nomination in Ohio, claims to have completed the basic structure of the organization, and says that Arnall will have a good foundation from which to work.
It seems unlikely, though, that Arnall, former governor of Georgia, would leave his position as an Atlanta lawyer and president of the Society of Independent Motion Picture producers for such an unpopular job alone.
If Truman should be re-elected, Arnall might be in a position for a cabinet office, possibly attorney general. That might be more the type of feather Arnall is seeking for his hat.
Arnall will take a leave of absence from his prosperous law firm, his $25,000-a-year job as president of the motion picture association and the presidency of the Dixie Insurance company to take the $16,000-a-year job as OPS head.
The figures don't seem to add up. Unless he is stunned with patriotism, he may have something else on his mind. It never hurt anyone to look to the future.
Arnall's term as governor saw some major reforms in Georgia. He sponsored the constitutional amendment to give the vote to 18-year-olds on the grounds that if they were old enough to fight, they were old enough to vote.
Arnall's actions show he is a man of action, who has dynamic thoughts and the ability and personality to push them through. He is as famous for his quips as former price chief, DiSalle.
Arnall also shoved through a prison system reform. His term ended with the historic wrangle with the current governor, Herman Talmadge.
Undoubtedly Arnall has the drive to be a success in his new office. What now remains is to see how long he will stay there.
This situation merits watching. —Pat Roney.
short ones
The Defense department announced recently it would begin to draft dentists for the first time since the outbreak of the Korean war. Who's been pulling Gl teeth all this time, combat mechanics?
Television networks have started broadcasting early morning programs. They're determined to keep people awake sometime during the day.
- A Soviet diplomat in the United Nations charged that World War III had already begun. So far his country is the only one not in it. Right now the Russians are sitting on top of the world. Or at least on top of China.
Most people would rather talk about themselves except when it comes to writing letters. Then they'd rather listen.
In Emporia, a girl broke out of jail with a spoon. Ingenuity is the breath of woman.
ФЛА
Zelgko
Will Wage Increases Bring Inflation?
"But sweet, every fraternity has a close case. It's just that no closet in this house can hold Gerard."
The CIO's headman, Philip Murray, has come out in favor of hiking the minimum wage hour law from 75 cents to $1.25 an hour. Many people have raised the objection that such a move would be inflationary.
Economists, however, emphasize that no wage increase is inflationary per se. That is, no wage increase would automatically cause prices to go upward. Whether or not an increase would result in higher prices depends entirely upon the relative level of the minimum wage to other games and prices throughout industry.
For an increase in the minimum wage to be inflationary, wages and prices would have to be too low in relation to the demand and to other wages and prices. Today's inflation is caused by the extraordinary demand for steel and other essential products needed in the nation's vast armament program.
Had such a proposal been voiced in the 1930's, labor would have objected because it would have forced a curtailment in production. Wages then would have been too high in relation to the demand and other prices and wages. Whenever wages are raised high enough in any industry, a depression or downward trend results within that industry.
armament needs are met.
If inflation is to be halted, the demand for these materials must be curtailed. This would call for cutting civilian production to the bone until our
Congress must use considerable judgment in deciding the matter. The inflationary-minded congressmen must realize that such measures are not automatically inflationary. Pro-labor members, however, must also realize that an excessive minimum wage would be detrimental to the nation's workers when the demand for goods is less.
The law makers must keep in mind that a minimum wage law is an attempt by the government to give more bargaining power to economically weaker workers. Such an aid is not necessary for workers who already have a sufficient bargaining power to successfully demand a fair wage.
Comments
—Charles L. Burch.
Publicity Stunt Exposed
The Ohio State Lantern sized up some of the campus coeds recently and swung from the floor. In an editorial it declared:
For the benefit of the coeds in Baker Hall who received all that glorious publicity for doing exactly nothing we have only this to say:
We know where the story was concocted. . and how it was fabricated out of nothing. And we're disappointed in you for permitting yourself to be used like that. The newspaper story said you—30 of you—had adopted a whole infantry company in the Korean battle area. The article stated that you had promised to write to all the lonesome guys in that company.
So you posed prettily and promised profusely. . and put the whole thing down as a big joke. We imagine those guys in Korea—who are still lonesome—are laughing themselves sick. Some of you may have intended writing, but intentions mean little to those guys over there.
Maybe we shouldn't get so excited about the whole deal. After all, that infantry company will never miss what it never had. It's just that we dislike pretenders.
We're proud of the Lantern reporters who—at our insistence—helped expose this whole thing as a faurce. But we're a bit disturbed by the reports we get of the intimidation which was aimed at preventing their bringing us the story. We frown on such action. . especially when it comes from the top brass.
A survey indicates that students at Southern Methodist University, Texas, are about evenly divided on the question:
"Should Negro students be admitted to classes at SMU?"
Race Ideas Shift At SMU
Forty-five per cent said they would be in favor of such a move, while 51 per cent said "no." The rest were undecided.
A poll taken in 1939 showed that only 18 per cent of the SMU students were in favor of dropping the racial bars.
Commented the SMU Campus in an editorial, "No Negroes are trying to get into undergraduate work here at the present time, and in all probability this situation will prevail for another decade or more.
"Certainly not until student sentiment allowing such a step reaches as high as 80 per cent can it be contemplated. Any attempt to force it sooner would almost certainly result in more evil than good."
Burma May Be Next Hot Spot If Reds Are Halted In Korea
Soviet Foreign Minister Vishinsky has charged that the U.S. is ferrying Chinese Nationalists troops into Burma for an attack on Red China's southern frontier.
Also a British newspaper, the London Sunday Observer, said "an independent American agency was helping to move Chinese Nationalists troops and supplies through Thailand into Burma.
The U.S. state department has denied these charges, but has warned that there is a possibility of an invasion of Burma by the Chinese Reds.
After considering these statements it appears that both the U.S. and Red China are expecting a war to break out in Burma. At the present time Communist guerrillas are trying to take over French Indo-China, but in the last few weeks the action has quieted down. French Foreign Minister Schuman said Jan. 6 that France "would not refuse an accord which would put an end" to the Indo-China civil war "under conditions which would be honorable to France."
Burma, which declared its independence from the British empire in 1847, has only an ill-trained, ill-equipped army of 50,000 men. Burma's present government has been unable to control rebel Karen tribes and armed bands of local Communists.
According to military authorities, Burma would be easier to invade than French Indo-China because of the terrain of the country. Also Burma is an agricultural country with rice one of its main crops. This rice would be very useful to the starving people of Red China. Burma carries on more than two-thirds of its trade with India. a nation that is friendly toward Red China.
Whether or not Burma becomes a world "trouble spot" probably will depend on the outcome of the Korean truce negotiations. If the Chinese Reds decide they can go no farther in Korea, it is possible they will put their whole weight behind a move to conquer Southeast Asia. —Max Thompson.
News From Other Campuses
An Interfraternity council "Greek Week" committee at Iowa State has outlined pre-initiation activities designed to "bring dignity and public service" into these activities.
Under discussion by fraternities for several years, this marks the first actual appearance of a "Greek Week" as such, at Iowa State.
The schedule suggested by the committee includes pledge lunch-
Michigan State university girls organized a football team to prove that the "weaker sex" is an accurate title. Then they challenged last year's intramural champions. The score: Men—13, Women—13.
eons, exchanges between fraternities, well known speakers and a public service project to be carried on cooperatively by all fraternity pledges.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANASS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., Associated Collegiate Press, and Intercollegiate Press. Assn. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, New York City.
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief ... Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants ... Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants ... Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahm
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman,
Joe Lostelic, Jim Powers
City Editor ... jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald Phil Newman
Jerry Renner, Katrin Swortz
Telegraph Editor ... Charles Burch
Assistant Telegraph Editor .. Max Thompson
Society Editor ... Dianne Stonebroker
Assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Pauline Patterson
Sports Editor ... Jackie Jones
News Adviser ... Victor J. Dainph
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager ... Emory Williams
National Advertising Manager ... Virginia Johnston
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Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Monday, Feb. 18, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Mt. Rainier
A BUS THAT FLIES The next best thing to flying in a big airliner across the mountains is a high trip on this "sky bus" up the steep slopes of Mt. Hood. This one is carrying a load of visitors from Government Camp, Ore., to Timberline Lodge to enjoy the pleasure of the skiing season, now in full swing. The spectacular trip by special tramway bus leads over beautiful forest areas, ravines and glacial terrain in the wilds of Oregon's mountains.
Iranian Standard Of Living Holds Despite Britian's Exit
Tehran, Iran—(U.P.)—Despite predictions of an early crackup of Iran's economy after the withdrawal of the British and their oil royalties, nine months of nationalization has brought almost no change in the standard of living of the average Iranian.
The man in the street has been affected little by the loss of Anglo-Iranian oil company revenues. Prices of such basic commodities as tea, sugar, bread and cotton goods either have remained stationary or have risen not more than 5 per cent over the last year.
With the upper and middle classes, however, it is a different matter. Prices of luxury goods have sky-rocketed because of heavy taxes and reduced imports.
Some 90 per cent of the population, however, has not been affected by the government's austerity policies. The government has made efforts to find other jobs for labor thrown out of work by curtailment of the oil industry's operations.
International trade on a cash basis is almost at a standstill because of the lack of foreign exchange, although foreign manufactured goods are still plentiful.
The government is making every effort to avoid economic collapse. The first step was to cut imports
Iran used to buy some 28 per cent of its imports in the sterling area for other transactions imposed by the British treasury, the amount was cut in half.
from 40,000,000 to 25,000,000 pounds annually. It has concluded barter deals to help close the gap.
Sugar deficits have been made up fairly successfully by barter with Russia and other countries.
So far, barter deals have been completed with Russia, Germany and France, among others. Negotiations are under way with Italy, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Japan.
To help out the government's program, a national per cent two-year loan has been floated. The total subscribed to date is 250,000,-000 rials.
Premier Mohammed Mossadegh's supporters say the government has written off the possibility of any income from oil, except for internal sales.
London — (U, P)—The "poisoner's best friend," a deadly, tasteless odorless liquid hitherto almost impossible to detect in the human body, has been trapped by science in a brilliant piece of international research extending from native Africa to Oxford.
British Scientists Discover 'Poisoner's Best Friend'
Peters said Sir Henry Dale, who investigated the plant 40 years ago, told him it was widely believed witch doctors in West Africa used it as a-secret poison and that it was responsible for a fatal paralytic disease among natives raging at that time.
No one will ever know how many "heart attacks" or how many fatal cases of "lockjaw" were really murder through its use. From now on poisoners no longer can administer the fluid with impunity. Science has caught up with them.
The story of fluoroacetic acid—the active component of the gibiflora plant of Africa—was told by Prof R. A. Peters of the biochemistry department of Oxford, where the clue to paralysis and death was found to be an innocent chemical, citric acid.
No one had suspected previously that citric acid, which is produced by the body itself in burning sugar, could be linked to murder.
The difficulty in detecting the poison has been due to incomplete knowledge of the process in the body by which energy is drawn from sugar. Peters and his team were doing a biochemical study of
The importance of this discovery to criminal investigation was noted immediately and Peters and his chemists, who came from Belgium, Italy, Britain, the United States and Australia, set about finding a method of determining when the poison has been administered.
That cannot be done before death but it may be some comfort to the victim to know his slayer probably will be punished. Highly technical, it involves detection of the amount of citric acid in the kidney (which has to be ground up for the purpose). An abnormal amount indicates poison.
fluoroacetic acid when they discovered it prevents the body from breaking down the citric acid created when sugar is burned into simpler compounds.
Retention of the waste citric acid they found finally acted as a violent poison on heart and nervous system.
Graduate Appointed To Engineering Position
Alden P. Edson, '37, has been appointed chief materials engineer at Hamilton Standard division of United Aircraft corporation, East Hartford, Conn.
Little Parallel Between Campus Interests In The 1952 Election And That Of 1948
Mr. Edson has been research metallurgist at the International Nickel company laboratories at Bayonne, N. J., and was chief metallurgist at Hamilton Standard prior to his new appointment.
There is little parallel between the interest in 1952 politics on the KU campus, and the interest in the national election of 1948.
Four years ago at this time students were experiencing a similar "boom for Ike" drive, but didn't know which direction the general would turn, Republican or Democrat. At that time nobody was certain that he would even attempt for the presidency.
The chances of Harry S. Truman being reelected president were dropping. Truman had alienated two segments from the Democrat party, and Progressives of Henry Wallace and the Dixiecrats segment of the South.
Senator Robert Taft, (D-Ohio), was in the running, too. In the early 1960s he was entering primaries to the senate he delegated to support his bid for the position.
Another familiar name seeking the job was that of Harold Stassen, former governor of Minnesota. Stassen, who was considered a youngster in political circles then, and a graduate of Michigan and delegates. He succeeded in gaining nine delegates in Ohio, political home of Senator Taft.
The most-touted candidate, however, was Gov. Thomas Dewey of New York. It was the second attempt for the governor. Political sentiment throughout the nation had been on hold since the 1980s. Dewey, Republicans felt that this was their chance to break a 16-year Democrat hold on the presidency.
University students thought so, too. Results of a Daily Kansan poll held in September, 1948, showed that students were almost two to one in favor of Dewey for president. Dewey garnered 63 per cent of student's votes in the poll, to 33
Advertising Class To Watch Popcorn
Students in the advertising campaign class, a senior course in the journalism advertising sequence, will tour the Barteldes Seed company plant in Lawrence Tuesday.
As a semester project, the students must plan an advertising campaign for a particular low priced, consumer product. TNT popcorn, a product of the Barteler Seed company, has been chosen for the project. The tour is designed to acquaint he students with the product.
Ben Barteledes, in charge of the TNT division, will conduct the tour through the processing plant at 826 Pennsylvania street. Popcorn from the start of the seeds through the processing and packaging in 10- ounce tins will be seen by the students.
per cent for Truman. The remaining 4 per cent was split between the Progressive and Dixiecra candidates.
Beside the Young Democrats and Young Republicans, there arose in 1948 the "Jayhawkers-for-Wallace" and "Students for Norman Thomas" clubs.
An exception to the general trend for Dewey was the School of Pharmacy. A Kansan article says that "The School of Pharmacy went four to one for Truman, for no apparent reason."
The College, said the Kansan, was "strongly Dewey," as was the School
Junior, Senior Win Bridge Tournament
Clay Roberts, business junior, and John McBride, college senior, won the Intramural Bridge tournament Feb. 14 at the Student Union.
Fourth place winners were John Buford, business senior and Roland Graham, education senior. They will receive medals.
The names of the winning team will be inscribed on a trophy, recently on display in the Union. Both will receive medals.
Second place went to William H. Edmunds, college senior and Dean Darling, education junior. James Riley and Manus Foster, graduate students, finished third. These men will also have their names inscribed on trophies and will receive medals.
Third place winners James Riley and Manus Foster are graduate students and are not eligible for intercollegiate bridge tournaments. As a result, KU will be represented at tournaments this year by first, second, and third place winners and Paul Pyeatee, business senior and Roland Graham, education senior, who will replace the graduate students.
of Fine Arts, which "showed the highest Dewey margin, 10 to 1." The article says the School of Business students and the journalists were split about 50-50 in opinion.
However, with Truman's amazing upset of Dewey in the November election of 1948, words printed in a March 16, 1948 editorial in the Kansan now seem somewhat prophetic in tone. The editorial, which dealt with personality quirks of possible candidates, said:
"The public's impression of the President is that he is no different from the head of the local Rotarians or an active member in the Kiwanis club. The President has fumbled important issues or made mistakes and then blandly admitted that they were too big for him or hinted that he wasn't the man for the job. The reaction of a large number of Americans to this apparent ineptness was that Harry Truman wasn't 'such a bad guy' because he is 'just like you and I.'"
Student Fellowship Topic
Student fellowship will be discussed by the Campus Affairs committee at 7:15 p.m. Wednesday in 222 Strong hall.
The discussion leader will be Gloria Anne Lehmann, college junior. Meetings of the Campus Affairs committee are informal discussions and open to all students.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 18, 1952
Track Squad Wins In Nebraska Meet
The Kansas track squad scored its first indoor victory in history over the Nebraska Cornhuskers in a dual meet at Lincoln Saturday night.
The Jayhawkers took all but three of the first places as they turned in an impressive $65 \frac{1}{2}$ to $38 \frac{1}{2}$ win over the Husker trackmen. This was the thirteenth indoor meeting between the schools.
Herb Semper, Kansas' flying head, wiped thirty seconds from the current KU-Nebraska indoor dual two-mile mark of 9:53.4. He established a new mark of 9:30.4.
The two-time NCAA crosscountry king from Forest Park, Ill, now holds every standard at that distance on the Jayhawker books except for duals against Iowa State and Colorado, in which he has never competed.
Wes Santee broke a 12-year-old meet record of 4:22.1 in the mile, as he raced the distance in 4:17.6. Second place in the mile went to Herb Semper, who has on numerous occasions doubled in both the mile and two-mile.
Kansas set another meet record in the 60-yard low hurdles, as Bob DeVinney went the distance in :66.9. This erased an old mark of :07.0 held by Bill Mooney of Nebraska and Jack Greenwood of Kansas
In the 60-yard dash, Don Hess and Bill Hawkey of Kansas came in first and second. Hess ran the dash in 06:4.
In the track events, the Jayhawkers took all but one first, totaling 51 points to 17 for the Huskers.
Kansas also placed two men in the 440-yard dash. John Reiderer took first and Don Smith came in third, with Nebraska's Brian Hendrickson finishing second. Reiderer's time was .517.
In the 880-yard run, Art Dalzell and Dave Fisher of Kansas finished first and second, with third going to Dale Schnackel of the Huskers. The time was 1:59.0.
Semper was first in the two mile, with another Kansan, Lloyd Koby, taking third. Semper's new record in this event bettered Cliff Abel's record set in 1950.
Young Star To Japan
Wichita (U.P.)—Three major league stars of today who have won the title of America's sandlot player of the year at the past national tournaments here and advanced directly into the majors, Eddie Waitkus of the Philadelphia Phils, Grady Hatton of the Cincinnati Reds, and John Presky of the Boston Sox, will have nothing on the youth chosen for this honor during the 18th annual classic starting here Aug. 15.
The National Baseball Congress today announced an impressive plan to honor the outstanding young player in the 1952 National with an all-expense paid trip to Tokyo as associates to the inter-hemispheric series against the Japanese titlists starting September 7.
The outstanding sandlot player of the year will be chosen from the 512 players who will represent state and bi-state championship teams in the national classic by the 16 members of the All-American board, comprised of major league scouts, coaches and select No. 1 players. is considered the best young prospect to make good in professional baseball.
Qualifications are that player must be 21 years of age or under with no previous experience in organized professional baseball.
This player will be honored during the opening day ceremonies in Japan and presented to an expected attendance throng of over 50,000.
In 1950 the United States champions, Fort Wayne (Ind.) Capeherts, defeated the Japan titlists, Osaka Kanebos, in the first interhemispheric series while playing before Japn. 317,000 paid attendance in Japn.
The U.S. representative will depart from Wichita immediately following conclusion of the national tournament for Japan, travelling via Pan American World Airways to the site of the 1952 interhemisphere playoffs.
In the 60-year high hurdles, only track event in which Kansas did not take first, Bob DeVinney and Don Woodson of the KU squad finished second and third. The winning time of .074 was set by Don Bedker of Nebraska.
The Kansas mile-relay team of Bob DeVinney, Bill Hawkey, John Reiderer and Don Smith won over the Huskers with a time of 3:30.5.
In the field events, the two schools split even. Kansas won the high jump and the pole vault, while Nebraska took the shot-put and the broad jump.
Buzz Fraizer of Kansas jumped $61\frac{3}{4}$ while Ray Smith of KU, Phil Heidelk and Bob Sand of Nebraska tied at 61.
Jim Floyd of Kansas went 13.0 feet to take the pole vault.
The Jayhawkers were shut out in the broad jump, but in the shot Galen Fiss took second with a heave of 45.5.
Coach Bill Easton said that he was very pleased with the performance of the Jayhawkers, and he hoped that his squad would be able to do as well against the Missouri Tiger in their dual meet at Columbia Saturday.
KU Swimmers Lose Dual Meet
The Kansas swimming team was able to capture only one first place as it fell to a powerful squad from Oklahoma 63 to 19 in a dual meet in Robinson pool Saturday.
The Jayhawker 400-yard free style relay team of Buterin, Ball, Boorn and Ellin burned in a 3:59.2 mph Walt Mikols' sound its only victory.
The Sooners, loaded with talent this season, took first in all other events. Six pool records were broken in the meet.
Leading swimmer for the Sooners was Graham Johnson, 440-yard British Empire swimming champion from South America. He posted a 2:14.4 in the 220-yard free style for a new record, and a 5:13.3 in the 440-yard free style for another record.
In the 220-yard free style, Johnston was first; Jack Hudack of Oklahoma, second; Sam Perkins of KU third.
Mahlon Ball of Kansas was third in the 60-yard free style, behind Stan Schecker and Jim McKinney of Oklahoma. The time was 30.0.
Dick Eflin of the Jayhawk team was third in the 120-yard medley, but would have finished well ahead, but would have not. He was hurt if he had not made a bad turn.
Two other records were set in the 200-yard back stroke and the 440-yard free style. John Green of Oklahoma did the back stroke in 2:26.2 and Johnston won the 440.
Dallas Chestnut took third for the Kansas team in diving, and John Ashley, another Jayhawk, finished third in the 100-yard free style. The time in this event was :55.5, a new pool record.
Coach Mikols said that he did not expect his young team to defeat Oklahoma, and he was satisfied that the squad had improved its own time in some of the events.
The Jayhawkers will face Colorado A&M at Fort Collins Friday and Colorado at Boulder Saturday. Coach Mikols expects the team to make an excellent showing with possible victories in both events.
Suggestions for pictures for next year's film series will be accepted before March 1.
Film Series Suggestions Accepted Until March 1
Raymond Nichols, chairman of the film series committee, said some suggestions have been offered but more are needed.
The committee is trying to pick three titles in each of the popular foreign languages in case the University cannot procure first choice.
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Page 5
Kansas Ties Point Record Nebraska Defeated 90-52
RV JACKIE JONES
Daily Kansan Sports Editor
The Kansas Jayhawkers tied the school scoring record Saturday night as they trounced the Nebraska basketball squad 90 to 52, in a game in which Big Clyde Lovellette scored 36 points.
The victory saw the Jayhawkers break their previous conference scoring mark of 86 points set against Iowa State earlier in the season, and tie the all-time high record which was established against Kansas State in the Big Seven pre-season tournament this year.
Nebraska was leading 8 to 6 with four minutes left in the first quarter, to Coach P. C. Allen's crew put on a burst of scoring and never relented.
At the end of the first quarter the score stood at 10 to 10, 40 to 19 at half time, and 61 to 33 as the final
KANSAS
16
CLYDE LOVELLETTE
period began. The Jayhawkers might have eclipsed their 90 points if the Huskers had not put on a stubborn rally in the last few minutes.
The fourth quarter, when KU often lets up in the scoring, proved a different situation as the Kansans went all-out in a drive which netted twenty-nine points to nineteen for Nebraska.
It appeared that the Jayhawkers were headed for more than 90 points. With four minutes remaining, KU led 80 to 41 and was scoring 27.5 per game before after Lovellett sank two quick shots hope faded for scoring more.
Everette Dye sank a long one-handed shot with less than five seconds remaining, to give KU its margin of victory.
Lovellette was only three points
short of the conference scoring mark, which he established as a sophomore against the Missouri Tigers.
The giant center has now collected 494 points this season for a 26 point game average.
He hit eight points in the first quarter, six in the second, seven in the third, and in the last stanza cut the cords for 15.
Kansas now has a 7-1 record in the conference race, right behind the Kansas State Wildcats, who are undefeated.
The Jayhawkier defense was much better than it has been in past performances, and Nebraska was unable to maintain any effective scoring drive. The Huskers hit 33 percent of their shots while KU sank thirty-seven of eighty-nine attempts for 42 per cent.
Coach Allen used all of his players in the contest, and twelve of them connected at least once. For one period in the fourth quarter, Bob was the only starter in the game, but the substitutes did as well as the regulars.
Box Score
Kenney turned in his usual consistent performance, netting nineteen points on a mixture of long set-shots and driving layups.
Totals 37 16 21
Nebraska (52) G FT F
Fredstrom 0 0 2
Matzke 2 0 4
Renselman 0 0 0
Weber 0 0 1
Fagler 1 3 1
Johnson 0 3 3
Buchanan 5 5 2
Exxstrom 0 1 0
Good 3 6 3
Sandbulte 0 1 1
Seger 3 5 1
Soeilberg 0 0 0
Kansas (90) G FT F
Alberts 0 1 0
Davenport 1 0 1
Kenney 7 5 1
A. Kelley 0 0 2
Squires 0 1 1
Keller 1 2 2
Lovellette 16 4 4
Born 1 0 1
Dye 1 0 0
Heitholt 2 1 0
Hoag 3 0 1
Hougland 2 2 3
Johnson 0 0 1
D. Kelley 3 0 3
Smith 0 0 1
Totals ... 14 24 18
Score by Quarters
This figures out to a percentage of.777fourth best in the land among
Kansas 19 21 21 20-90
Nebraska 10 9 14 19-86
Free throws missed: Nebraska—Johnson 2, Seger 2. Kansas—Lovellette 2, Heitholt, Hougland.
Phog Allen Needs One To Reach 700 Wins
If the Kansas Jayhawkers can defeat the Oklahoma Aggies Tuesday night, it will not only be a great victory, but it will mark a milestone in the history of basketball.
The veteran Kansas ringmaster, who had acquired years of solid coaching background before his present-day foes had even earned their first varsity letter, is just one year old of the mythical 700 mark.
The Jayhawker's 90 'to 52 conquest of Nebraska moved Allen's all-time win column to 699. In 42 years at four schools, KU, Baker, Haskell and Warrensburg Teachers, they have dropped only 202 decisions.
It will mean 700 cage wins for Coach F. C. Phog Allen, more than any other coach has been able to win and more games than most of them have even coached.
The dean of American cage tutors also can gain on second place Hank Iba, by beating the Iron Duke of Stillwater Tuesday. Only Adolph Rupp, who played on Allen's Missouri Valley conference championship squad of 1923, is beyond 800 per cent. The little Baron of Kentucky tops the current list with 965 on a 462-72 record.
active coaches. Allen has a good chance to climb to third before the season's end, since he trails Bowling Green's Harold Anderson by a single percentage point.
In actual victories Western Kentucky's Ed Dibble, now in his 31st year, has won 549 games, the only coach even close to Allen.
University Daily Kansan
Allen has gathered 23 championships in his 41 complete years on the coaching lines, which means a title per cent of 68.
Round-Up
-Intramural
Division Finals Today Fraternity "A" 9:15 p.m.
Anybody will agree this is quite a standard for a 10-time grandfather. Allen also has one great grand-child.
Beta Theta Pi-Delta Upsilon Independent "A"
p. m. Stephenson-Dark Horses Fraternity "B"
Beta Theta Pi-Phi Gamma Delta
*Independent" B^*
*"Independent" B^*
Monday, Feb. 18, 1952
Varsity House-AFROTC
Fraternity "C"
Phi Gamma Delta-Nu Sigma Nu
Four games were played Saturday afternoon in the intramural basketball playoffs; but only one of these contests was settled by the end of the regular playing time.
Four IM Games Played Saturday
Heywood Davis led the Phi Gamma offensive with 21 points on eight goals and five free throws. Dick Dellis was also his losing Phi Delt's with 11 points.
In that game, Phi Gamma Delta halted a late Phi Delta Theta rally, winning 45 to 43.
Nu Sigma Nu to defeated Lambda Chi Alpha, 30 to 29 in a game which ended in a heated argument. The score card registered a 29 to 28 victory, but a recount of points showed that Nu Sigma was actually the winner.
Stephenson was awarded a decision over Phi Beta Pi after it was discovered that Phi Beta used an ineligible plaver.
David Raab led the scoring for the winners with 11 points while Bob Kay counted 10 for Lambda Chi.
Stephenson trailed 26 to 27 at the end of the contest, but was awarded the victory. Bob Payne scored 11 points for Phi Beta Pi, and Walt Haskins led the scoring for Stephenson with 14 points.
In an identical situation, the Dark Horses were given a decision over whether Merchants after an inteligence statement listed on the Merchants' squad.
Kellogg, Idaho—U (P. P.) - Judge Joe Irvine thinks he has solved the problem. He makes them write a 500-word theme on the subject of safe driving.
Judae Makes Them Write
The Dark Horses had lost 38 to 31 in an overtime. Gil Reich led the Feather Merchants' attack with 15 points, four of them in the extra period, and George Kennard was top scorer for the Dark Horses with 12 points.
KURTIS - KRAFT
READY FOR INDIANAPOLIS—Fred Agabashian, Albany, Calif., veteran for five previous 500-mile races, gets the feel of the new Cummins diesel special which he will drive in the 1952 Indianapolis speedway classic on May 30. The car, entered by the Cummins Engine company, Columbus, Ind., is only 29 inches high at the cowl and is powered by an experimental diesel engine of horizontal design. The body
was built by Kurtis-Kraft of Los Angeles, Calif.
Face Controls Under New Plan
A plan which would clamp strict controls on college sports has been unanimously approved by the executive committee of the American Council on Education.
The committee adopted, with only minor reservations, the code drawn up by eleven college presidents. The plans would now call for:
3. Basketball practice and games shall be limited to a 3½ month period.
4. Baseball practice should be limited to a $ 31^{\prime \prime} $month period.
2. Outright athletic scholarships would be abolished.
1. Football games and practices should be kept strictly within the season, from Sept. 1 to the first Saturday in December. This would eliminate bowl games and spring practice.
5. All athletes should make regular progress toward a degree.
6. No freshmen should be allowed to play on varsity teams.
7. All athletic funds should be handled by the university.
Officials at Kansas State College and the University did not appear to be alarmed by the proposed changes.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said, "In the past the University always has patterned its athletic policy in co-operation and consultation with the Big Seven schools. It would be my personal judgment that the University will follow the majority of the Big Seven in this matter."
Athletic Director A. C. Dutch Lonborg said, "We'll definitely have to comply with whatever action the Big Seven takes."
Head Football Coach Jules Sikes.
said, "Of course we'll comply with the Big Seven. But we go right ahead with plans for sping football practice until we're told by the conference or by our chancellor we can't have it."
Dean T. DeWitt Carr, athletic representative to the conference said, "What else can we do but comply?"
Kindness Remaid
Westminster, Mass. — (U.P.)—When Robert Bond's home was destroyed by fire, neighbors and friends pooled their abilities and rebuilt the house without charge. They said Bond had been kind to them at various times and they wanted to repay him.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Feb. 18, 1952
...
THE MOST REV. EDWARD J. HUNKELER, bishop of Kansas City, Kan., (second from left), is shown with Emil L. Telfel (left) associate professor of journalism, the Rev. George Towle, pastor of St. John's Catholic church, Lawrence, (second from right), and Joe Wimsatt, business senior (right) and Phi Kappa chapter president. Bishop Hunkeler was inited into Epsilon chapter of Phi Kappa in ceremonies Sunday at the charter house. Professor Telfel is the faculty adviser. —Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Advertising Sorority Initiates 13 Women
Thirteen women recently were initiated in Gamma Alpha Chi, professional advertising sorority, at an initiation banquet and honor's day banquet at the Castle Tea room.
Two of the thirteen women were coronary initiates. They were Miss Daria Marie Dunn, fashion illustrator for the Kansas City Star, and fras. Richard G. Zimmerman of lawrence.
Other initiates were Elaine Blaylock and Virginia Johnston, journalism seniors; Anne Galloway and Susan Manovill, college seniors; Lura Johnson, fine arts senior; Virginia Mackey and Patricia Vance, journalism juniors; Marilyn Dubach, college junior; Louise Swigart and nine Southwick, fine arts juniors, and Pat Howell, college sophomore.
An award was presented to Virginia Johnston as being the most outstanding girl in the advertising department. She was selected by a committee consisting of Dean Burton W. Marvin of the School of journalism, Robert W. Doores, instructor in journalism and sponsor of the group and Pat Brown, president of Gamma Alpha Chi.
Donna Jones Wed To David Brandt Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. George L. Jones, Kansas City, Kans., announce the recent wedding of their daughter, Donna Lee, to David Dixon Brandt, son of Mr. and Mrs. David D. Brandt Sr., Riverdale, Md.
The double-ring ceremony took place at the Welborn Community church in Kansas City, Kans. Barbara Ann Garberich, college sophomore, was bridesmaid; Allie Kathryn Grove, education junior, was bridesmaid, and Marjorie Brown, college sophomore, was dandelighter.
William McClelland was best man or the bridegroom. The ushers were Hugh Eberle and William Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Brandt are both college sophomores. They are at home at 844 Tennessee street.
American Diets Show Gain In Last 15 Years
Washington - (U.P.) American diets in the last 15 years have shown big gains in the direction of proteins, vitamins and minerals and away from high calorie foods, according to Agriculture Department statistics.
Compared to the period before World War II, the people of the United States are eating 19 per cent more meat, poultry, and fish; 42 per cent more eggs; 11 per cent more fruits and vegetables, and 20 per cent more dairy products (except butter.)
Byron T. Shaw of the Agricultural Research Administration said that in spite of the progress, many groups are still below nutritional par in their eating. For instance, farm diets are most likely to be short on calcium and vitamins A and C which farm-produced milk, fruits and vegetables could supply.
Official Bulletin
Sigma Delta Chi banquet open to all Journalism students, 6 p.m. Friday, Hotel Eldridge. Sign for tickets Business office by 5 p.m. Wednesdays
Le Cercle Francais se reunira mercredi a sept heures et demie dans la salle 113 Strong.
All Student Council meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Pine room, Memorial Union.
Correction: Campus Affairs meeting, Wednesday, February 20, 222 Strong.
Make application for following positions on "College Daze" and turn in to Student Union Activities office or Dick Klassen by noon Feb. 21. Costumes, make-up, programs, editor, art editor, advertising manager, ticket chairman, secretarial staff, vocal director.
Openings for editor and business manager for K-Book, K-Calendar and Student Directory. Written applications to Bill Stinson, dean of men's office, deadline March 1. See Bill Stinson for details.
Kappa Alpha Theta Installs New Officers
Barbara Comstock, fine arts junior, recently was installed as president of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority for the soming year.
Other officers installed were Nancy Neighbor, vice-president for the spring semester; Kay Conrad, vice-president for the fall of '52 and the spring of '53; Jerry Hese, corresponding secretary; Bonita Bowman, house manager; Louise Sigart, chief marina; Camgant, rush president; Constance Kagey, treasurer; Sara Starry, treasurer's deputy.
Joan Goodjohn, scholarship chairman; Celia Kilgore, social chairman; Jean Stoneman, song leader; Sally McKernan, editor and publicity chairman; Nancy Gilchrist, intramurals chairman; Nancy Landon, activities chairman; Kay Russell, recording secretary, and Mary Evan Holte, archivist.
Phi Kappa Psi Is 100 Years Old
The centennial anniversary of the founding of the Phi Kappa Psi social fraternity was celebrated by alumni and undergraduate members at their annual Founders' Day banquet Saturday at the Hotel Muehlebach in Kansas City.
Phi Kappa Psi was founded Feb 19, 1852, in Canonsburg, Pa. The Kansas chapter was chartered in 1876. Both the Kansas and Missouri chapters were represented at the dinner.
Brig. Gen. Lawrence H. Whiting, vice-president of the national fraternity, was the principal speaker. General Whiting was in charge of rebuilding the army personnel system in World War II and now is president of the American Mart Building company at Chicago.
Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Journal-World, was toastmaster. Two former national presidents of the fraternity who attended were Winston R. Tate, Kansas City, Mo., and Charles E. Strickland, Mason City, Iowa.
The annual award presented by the Kansas City Alumni association for the outstanding Phi Psi athlete in the Big Seven-Big Ten district went this year to Bill Reichardt, much-honored offensive backbone from the University of Iowa. Last year's award went to Nebraska's Bobby Reynolds.
Members of Gamma Delta, national Lutheran student organization, will play a big role this semester in the completion of the $80,000 Lawrence Immanuel church.
Members have outlined a three-part program to aid local church members, the Rev. Norman Brandt, director of Gamma Delta student activities, said.
In the past few weeks a dozen students have torn off stone facing on the outer wall of the basement in preparation for new brick facing. Students visited members of their home congregation to ask for loan subscriptions.
Faculty Wives Share Recipes
For those women at the University who are married, or engaged, or who perhaps just have a recipe hobby, we would like to run a series of these foreign recipes. If there is any faculty wife who would like to donate her recipe to this series, we would appreciate having her send it to the Society editor, so that it may be printed in this series.
About the last place one would look for a collection of exotic foreign recipes would be in Kansas, but the wives of faculty members at the University have had opportunities to collect unusual recipes while traveling in foreign countries, or else they have come to this country with their husbands from abroad, bringing with them their favorite recipes.
Indian Curry is a basic dish in India, but it is not commonly seen in America or parademmen Shawla, whose husband is a visiting professor of mathematics at KU, brought this recipe for curry to Kansas from India. It is usually served with boiled rice.
Indian Curry
1 pound meat cut in 1-inch cubes
2 medium onions, chopped fine,
2 or 3 garlic cloves, chopped fine.
$ \frac{1} {2} $ teaspoon tumeric.
½ teaspoon or less cayenne pepper
1 or 2 bay leaves.
$\frac{1}{2}$ cup cooking oil or butter.
A small pinch of black pepper,
cloves, cinnamon, sugar and salt to taste.
Heat fat and cook onions and garlic till golden brown. Add meat, cayenne pepper, salt, sugar, tumeric, bay leaf, and cover sauce pan and reduce heat. Stir and cook until meat is fried and brown. Add water, covering the meat. Cook until meat is tender and the gravity is thick and smooth. Sprinkle with black pepper, cinnamon and cloves. (Chicken, fish, potatoes and peas, or hard boiled eggs can be used in place of meat.)
Education Fraternities Give Valentine Dinner
A Valentine's day dinner for members and guests of Phi Delta Kappa and Pl Lambda Theta, national honor fraternities for men and women in education, was held Feb. 14 in the Plymouth Congregational church.
This was the first joint meeting the two fraternities have had in several years. Members of both groups hope it will become an annual event.
Donna McCosh, president of Pi Lambda Theta, made the speech of welcome. Carl Ladd, president of Phi Delta Kappa, introduced the faculty sponsors. They were Miss Helen Lohn, associate professor of home economics and member of Pi Lambda Theta and Dr. Oscar M. Haugh, assistant professor of education and member of Phi Delta Kappa.
Dr. Haugh introduced Dr. and Mrs. Sarvadaman Chowla, visiting mathematics professor and his wife from India. They both spoke to the group on education in India.
Members of the planning committee were Carl Ladd, Fritz Forbes, Otho Rasmussen and Melvin Zack, Phi Delta Kappas, and Donna McCosh, Janice Horn and Ruth Kenney, PiLambda Thetas. Mary Selig and Chloe Warner were in charge of decorations. Pi Delta Kappa provided dinner music.
Edwards Gets Appointment
Miss Verna Edwards, secretary of the department of Romance languages, has received an appointment to the State department in Washington D.C., for foreign service. Miss Edwards, with a major in the Latin American area, has chosen Latin America as her field of specialization in the State department. She will leave for her new duties Saturday, March 1.
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ASSOCIATED WOMEN STUDENTS
Amendments To The Constitution of The
To Be Voted On In General Election
FEBRUARY 27
ARTICLE V, SECTION 5: (Vacancies) Vacancies occurring among representatives to the House shall be filled by the particular women which the student represented. Elected Senate vacancies shall be filled by the defeated candidate for that office. Other Senate vacancies shall be filled through new petitions.
Amended to read:
Vacancies occurring among representatives to the House shall be filled by the particular women which the student represented. Elected Senate vacancies shall be filled at the discretion of the Senate. Other Senate vacancies shall be filled through new petitions.
ARTICLE VI, SECTION 3: The election date shall be set by the Senate and where possible elections shall be held 3 weeks before the ASC elections.
The election date shall be set by the Senate and where possible elections shall be held as soon after the beginning of the spring semester as is feasible.
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Phone K.U.376
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Terms: Casn. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be sent during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office, Journey Building, 345 East 345 p.m. the day before publication date.
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CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh your self with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 410. 1198 Mass.
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CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and cakes. We serve hot or for customers conditioned. Opens 8 a.m., till midnight. Crystal Cafe, 690 Vt.
JAXHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are ours, but they have everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tt
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DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelican Graphos instruments are here. For drawing, get your own large selection now available your Student Union Book Store. 22
Special rates to Students on subscriptions to TIME, LIFE, AND NEWSWEEK magazines. Order yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 22
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Nursery School Workshop May Become Annual Affair
The workshop, held for the first time this year, is for the purpose of studying ways of caring for children of pre-school age, and was partially sponsored by the department of home economics.
Because of the success of the recent pre-school workshop held at the University nursery school, the workshop may become an annual affair, Mrs. Luella Foster, instructor of home economics, has announced ___
More than 70 parents, teachers, nurses, ministers and operators of nursery schools attended the work- day meetings for Saturday, from Jan. 12 to Feb. 2.
Persons as far away as Wichita attended the workshop. Also there were representatives from DeSoto, Omaha, and Kenworth, Kansas City and Lawrence.
Every Saturday films were shown concerning child care and a discussion period was held dealing with problems in caring for children of certain age groups, individual child programs for day care and nurseries.
Other sponsors of the workshop besides the home economics department, were the state board of health, division of child and maternal health; the state department of social welfare; division of nurses; the Lawrence Pre-school association, and University Extension.
Consultants for the workshop were Mrs. Foster, Miss Ruth McNeill, teacher at the University nursery school; Dr. G. M. Martin, director of the division of child and maternal health, state board of health, Topeka; Mrs. Mary Daniels, director, cooperative nursery school of Lawrence; Mrs. Alberta Hillier, director of the community nursery school, Topeka, and Miss Thelma McClure, group care consultant, state department of social welfare, Topeka.
Bankers Get Tips On Robbery Curbs
Quinney, Mass.—(U.P.) —The man who installed the burglar alarms in the U.S. Treasury in Washington has a "lucky seven" he'd throw in the face of every holdup man in the nation.
Clarence L. Flagg, 71, retired former protection engineer says his "lucky seven" suggestions could wreck the plan of any "Slick Willie" Sutton who comes along.
"Bankers' Hours." Flagg says, are traditional and he would make use of them in foiling holdup men. Flagg suggests keeping bank vaults closed with time locks set for 15-minute delayed openings. No bandits, he says, will wait 15 minutes for any vault to open.
Monday morning, when weekend receipts are taken from night deposit boxes, place them in the vault and count them up after bank doors are closed at the afternoon. Are they won't be any "easy pickings" for handets.
Don't let any "customer" just stand around looking at the inside of a bank. Ask if you can help him. That will avoid a chance of someone "casing" the bank for a holdup.
His other suggestions:
Do not allow safe deposit box customers in the bank after closing hours. Someone else might be waiting to follow them in.
Keep a pile of worn bills in every cashier's cage with the serial numbers recorded. Bandits won't spend money, but they'll never suspect worn ones.
Never let payroll messengers use the same routes, same times, and if possible avoid the same days.
Keep checking up on branch banks and have branch employees always on the alert. With less help, such banks are more vulnerable.
Do you have trouble with buttons popping off your coat or dress? Here's a solution: when you buy a new garment, touch the center of each button with transparent nail polish before you wear it. This seals the threads so they will not unravel.
FOR RENT
Problems varying from "Who is my congressman?" to a statewide survey of flood control occupy the staff members and undergraduate researchers of the 50-year-old, politically neutral, KU government research bureau.
Research Bureau Solves Problems
Ethan P. Allen, Professor of political science, heads this investigating organization. He is assisted by E. O. Stene, professor, and J. W. Drury, assistant professor of political science.
The services of the bureau include a consulting service for state and local agencies to aid them in solving technical and administrative problems. One of the latest projects of the bureau has been a comprehensive study of the Newton city water supply system.
VACANÇY for two boys. 1218 Miss.
phone 514. 18
The bureau also holds annual training schools of three to five days for public service personnel. A-city clerk training program will be held Thursday and Friday and city managers will attend a school in April.
Qualified undergraduates may do research on current governmental problems while still on the campus. Internships on various agencies are also arranged for qualified graduate students.
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new semester with higher grades. Only students receive $35 per month for portable and standard machines. **Study Union Book Store.** **22**
For the general public the bureau each day answers questions which range from "What is the state mill levy?" to "Who started the war in Korea?"
The Sociology newsletter, a weekly publication, is being distributed among members of the department of sociology and anthropology.
Sociology Newsletter Has Summary Of Radi Speech
The mimeographed sheet contains a summary of the talk made by Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology, on the KLWN program, Sociology on the Air, Sunday.
Sidonie Brown, college sophomore, and Virginia Ferguson, college senior, are editors of the publication.
Monday, Feb. 18, 1952
German Educators Visit University
Three members of the German commission of UNESCO visited various departments of the University recently to study educational methods.
They were Dr. Walter Beck, and Dr. Helmut Stark, university professors, and Frau Annedore Lebar, publisher of children's educational books.
Clayton Crosier, president of UNESCO in Douglas county, was host to the three visitors. They were accompanied by Leo Molinaro, executive secretary of the state UNESCO organization.
Film Series Has Foreign Flavor
A schedule of four foreign movies will be shown as the remaining film series presentations this semester.
The Feb. 29 production will be "The Titan," the story of Michelangelo. It is a Robert Flaherty production and is narrated by Fredric
March 21, a Spanish film with English titles, "Locura de Amor," will be given.
The last film series presentation of the year will be April 4 when "The Wall of Malapaga" will be featured. This movie is an Italian film with English titles and dialogue in both French and Italian.
All film series presentations are free to students and faculty. They are held in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 p.m.
Reporter Elected Chicago Alumni Head
James M. Mundis, '37, recently was elected president of the Chicago Alumni association.
Mr. Mundis, a reporter for the Chicago Daily News, will replace Jack Truchart, '43, outgoing president. Paul Kihm, '38, was re-elected vice-president and Mrs. Bernice Tabor Vander Vries, '11, was re-elected honorary vice-president. Wade Stinson, '51, is the new secretary.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, spoke at the meeting. The movie "Football Highlights of 1951" was shown.
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"All university students join or of the hundreds of political parties she said. "Often, if a teacher know a student belongs to a party opposing his, it is very hard to pass the examinations."
Students in Greece are so strongly interested in politics that they are often demonstrations and riot on the campuses and in the clite special student group at Athens, Greece, told the Sociolog club recently.
It is very hard to enter a university in Greece, she said, because of the expense and the high competitiveness of the entrance examinations. Out of 1,300 students who too examinations to enter the medical school, only 300 were placed.
Greek Students' Politics Hot
The living expense is very high it going to a university she said, an there are opportunities for stu employment which such are available in the United States.
Students do not live in organize houses and have little chance to go acquainted with one another because the classes are very large, sh said. Classes consist entirely of lectures.
All Greek children must go to school for six years, Miss Syrro explained. They may then go to gymnasium (high school) if the like for six more years and then on to a summer camp, she said, at least 70 per cent of th students go to gymnasium after finishing the first six grades.
Sheriff Finds His Blackjack
Lewiston, Idaho—(U.P).—S h e r i f Clarence Kyle found his blackjack when he sorted through a pile c stolen articles cached under a haystack.
Comfort! Convenience OF
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
NOW Burt
Lancaster
"Ten Tall Men"
Color by Technicolor
Comfort Convenience
JAYHAWKER
NEW Post Book CUSTOMED CHAIRS
WARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
WARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
NOW 2 ZANE GREY'S
"MYSTERIOUS RIDER"
"THE LIGHT OF
THE WESTERN STARS"
Comforti Conventione
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Starts Thursday
ALLLED ARTISTS
presents
TOM
JANE
MICHAEL
GUNNY
SIMMS • DRAKE • NIGH • O'SHEA
Disc Jockey
BUFF
MORGAN
TOMMY DORSEY
SARAH
VAUGHAN • JEFFRIES
Comfort Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
ALIRED ARTISTS
present
TOM JANE MICHAEL
GINNY SIMMS • DRAKE • NIGH • O'SHEA
Disc Jockey
RUSS MORGAN
TONY DORSEY
BARAN HEBE
VAUGHAN • JEFFRIES
On Our Stage
Thursday Nite 8:45 ADELANE'S
Presents
VACATION:
Anywhere U.S.A.
Spring and Summer Fashion Show Featuring Lovely Models From L.M.H.S. - K.U. And Lawrence's Prettiest Young Matrons
Press To Face Great Challenge Marvin Says
Monday. Feb. 18, 1952
The press faces a great challenge in the 1952 elections, Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, said on the Sociology on the Air broadcast over station KLWN Sunday.
People in the newspaper world were greatly concerned when in 1948 the press failed to ascertain the facts of the political trend of the Truman presidential victory, he said.
The public must be educated in reading and this education must not be put off until a student reaches the university level, but must start at an early age, he explained.
"The press has vowed to do better and I believe that it will," Dean Marvin said. "But John Q. Public must know what he wants from the press."
He added, "There is a great task to perform, and we at the University of Kansas intend to do our part." To meet the challenge, schools must educate future journalists to search for the facts behind the truth and educate the non-journalism students to become aware of the press and its importance in the lives of all Americans he said.
He concluded that history shows that the performance of the press in politics has improved greatly, but as William Allen White, famed Kansas editor, pointed out, there is always room for improvement.
Well Known Official Dies
Funeral services for Charles B. Newell, business manager, of the University of Kansas Medical center for seven years, are scheduled for today at the Old Mission Methodist church in Kansas City, Kan.
Mr. Newell, the first full-time business manager to serve the state medical school, was appointed by former Chancellor Deane W. Malott. He was a graduate of the School of Business.
One of the most widely known hospital administrators in the Middle West, he served as president of the Kansas Hospital association in 1947-48.
As administrator of the center, he was in charge of all budgetary work, business contracts and the construc- tion program.
During his tenure, the connecting corridor in the D building was completed, two floors added to both of the clinic buildings, a floor added to the Hixon laboratory and the sixth floor of the B building remodeled.
Police Investigate 2 KU Burglaries
Police today were investigating two burglaries of University engineering equipment last week.
Five stop watches used for various forms of testing were stolen Friday from the mechanical engineering department there were no signs of forced entry.
Police Chief John Ingalls said he believes the watches, valued at $75, were taken by someone with a key to the lab.
Equipment valued at $170 was stolen from the research division in the Engineering Experimental Station earlier in the week. Articles missing include an electric car set of machines, cutters, pipe two crescent wrenches, small vice-grip pliers and a variable transformer.
It is believed that a key was also used to gain entrance to the "Mud Hut." Morris Teplitz, research chemist, said the thief evidently knew what he wanted.
Logan To Speak At Politics Forum
James Logan, president of the All Student Council will speak on student politics at a coffee forum at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the upper room of the Hawk's Nest.
University Daily Kansan
SAL
CLYDE LOVELETTE, after sinking 36 points in KU's 90-52 triumph over Nebraska, is mobbed by fans requesting autographs and offering congratulations. Thirty-five hundred fans saw the All-American in what was perhaps his greatest college performance. In addition to his scoring exhibition, he participated in fast breaks, fed his teammates for lay-ups and played a good defensive game.—Kansan photo by Jim
Composer of'Cry' Inspired During Nightwatch Duty
He sent more than 200 of the songs that came to him in the night to publishers without a single acceptance. In many cases the envelopes weren't even opened.
Pittsburgh — (U.P.) — Churchill Kohlman, a cleaning plant night watchman who composed the current hit song, "Cry," credits the long hours he has spent patrolling his lonely rounds for the inspiration.
Kohlman said he planned to "continue in his job even though "Cry" is near the sales top. Sixteen record companies have waxed the song and one company alone has sold almost a million copies.
"All my life I've been chasing the songwriters' rainbow, but I didn't dream it would be like this," Kohlman said.
Then one night as he worked as
watchman at the University of Pittsburgh, he heard a professor talking to his wife on the telephone. The wife wanted advice on how to quiet her baby, who was crying.
"He told his wife to let the baby cry; it would do her good to get it out of her system," Kohiman related. Before the night was over a song urging the world to "go sheed and was lifting through Kohiman's mind.
Poor Addressing Slows GI Mail
San Francisco—(U.R.)—Incomplete addresses are resulting in "thousands" of letters and packages being delayed in reaching Army and Air Force troops in the Far East.
Because of the heavy load, Army postal officers said every letter and package should contain the man's name, rank and service number, the identification of the unit with which he is serving, the APO number, and the words "o/o Postmaster, San Francisco" if he is in the Pacific
The San Francisco port of embarkation said its mail business clearing through the Army postal service has hit its post-world War II peak.
The melody sounded good to him then. Now, hearing it from radios, television sets and music boxes, Kohlman said:
A film on the Australian Student congress will be shown at 3 p.m. Tuesday in 205 Fraser hall by two Austalian debates, Robin Millhouse, law student at the University of Adelaide, and John Boyd Reid, law student at Melbourne university.
During last December, some 150,- 000 pieces of overseas mail had to be turned over to federal directory service employees because they were incorrectly addressed.
"It's really music to my ears."
Film To Be Shown By 2 Australians
The Australian debaters will match wits with two University students, Heywood Davis, college senior, and Kenneth Sulston, graduate student, in an international opinion forum at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser theater.
Te debaters will answer any questions and discuss the film. Members of the Kansas university debate team and members of the department of speech and drama will be present.
"The Effect of the Current International Situation on Social Conditions,"
"an Objective Project," Esther E. Twinkle, professor of social work at Pratt Tuesday.
Professor To Give Lecture At Pratt Women's Forum
A native of Pittsburgh, Kohlman's only musical education was a correspondence school course in theory, but he can "chord enough on the piano to get a tune down on paper."
Miss Twente will speak to members of the Women's forum of that town.
Pharmacy Lists 21 On Honor Roll
The names of 21 students appear on the fall semester honor roll of the School of Pharmacy released by Dean J. Allen Reese.
Dean Reese said four of the students had made all "A" grades for a 3.0 grade-point average. They were Margaret Follett and Walter Haskins, sophomores; Joseph Meek, junior, and Robert Donley, senior.
The complete honor roll includes Ivan Watkins, freshman; Margaret Follett, Rodney Gladart, Junior; Derek Garse, House of Science; Newark House, Richard Marquardt; Dom Preston, Ellen Skinner and Wayne Wagers, sophomores.
Ray Chiles, Joan Headley, Robert Leib, Joseph Meek, Robert Nicholson, Robert Seutter and Carroll Smith, junior, and Robert Donley, Gilbert Emick, Winfred McEhleny and Harry Shultz, seniors.
KU Chess Players Lose Match to KC
The KU Chess club lost a return match to the Kansas City club Sunday $ 61 \frac{1}{2}-41 \frac{1}{2}. $
Winners for KU were Henry Horak, assistant professor of astronomy; Robert Berggren, graduate students; Edgar Marihug, college sophomore, and Henry Georgi, business senior, and Alessia Chevron, Ralph Italie, graduate student, and His opponent ended their game in a draw.
Each team was represented by 11 players. Eleven games were played and a point scored for each.
The match began at 2:30 and lasted five hours. The longest game was 4½ hours.
WEATHER
Another return match with the Kansas City club is being planned.
Mostly cloudy this afternoon, colder northwest and extreme north; cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Showers or scattered thundershowers southeast, occasional rain or drizzle northeast and southwest, freezing drizzle or light snow in the northwest tonight. Continuing on Tuesday, colder southwest tonight and over the state Tuesday. Lows tonight 15 northwest to 40 southeast. High Tuesday in 20's northwest to 40's southeast.
News Roundup
Germany Demands Voice In West Europe Defense
London—(U.P.)—West Germany demanded an equal voice in the conduct of Western Europe's defense today as the price for a contribution of $2,500,000,000 and 12 divisions totalling 305,000 troops.
Chancellor Konrad Adenauel spelled out the Bonn government's demands at a meeting with the big three foreign ministers with the U.S., Anthony Eden of Britain and Robert Schuman of France.
The three Western foreign ministers and their 30 advisers reached full agreement Sunday on a joint policy toward Western Germany and called in Adenauer today to hear his views and explain their decisions.
UN Forces Keep Reds Off Balance
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea (U.P.)-United Nations forces hit the Communists with bayonets, tanks and planes today to keep them off balance.
Nineteen American Sabre jets screening "operation strangle" fighter-bombers damaged two Communist MIG-15 jet fighters and routed 38 more in a blazing dogfight over Northwest Korea.
On the ground, UN tanks and infantry wiped out a reinforced Communist platoon in one of three hit-and-run "killer raids" along the Western half of the front.
Challenge Veto Of Russia
Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.) —The Communists today challenged the right of the United Nations to veto Russia as one of six neutral nations to police a Korean armistice.
The Reds indicated they are prepared to delay a truce indefinitely over the issue. They insisted that neither side has the right to vote in the central nations nominated to the supervision group by the other side.
Britain To Test Atomic Weapon
London—(U.P.)—Two British warships are preparing to sail for Australia from a South England port with equipment needed to test Britain's first atomic weapon, informed sources said today.
Prime Minister Winston Churchill announced Sunday night that Britain will test the otherwise unidentified "atomic weapon. . . in close cooperation with the government of Australia."
It was reported that the weapon probably is an atomic warhead for use on a guided missile or rocket. There were reports in scientific circles also that it might be an atomic artillery shell, to be lobbed from mortars, or a "little" bomb to be dropped from a plane.
Committee Finds No Reds At Yale
New Haven, Conn.—(U.P.)A committee of distinguished Yale graduates said today the university's faculty should be permitted to teach all sides of any problem but warned professors what they say on or off campus "can do great harm."
The special eight-man committee appointed by Yale President A. Whitney Griswold to investigate charges of Communist indoctrination on the campus said there were more Neds or subversives on the faculty.
Trainmen Urged Not To Walk Out
Washington—(U.P.) —The national mediation board urged the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen today to "pull down" a strike deadline set for Wednesday against the Pacific Electric Railway company.
Mediation board chairman Everett Edwards said the board telegraphed a request to the union "to pull down their strike date set for and against our mediations and our mediation efforts". He said a walkout by the 1,900 trainmen would sharply him-
der operations of the Los Angeles harbor.
The Union is demanding a 35 cent an hour increase while the company is insisting on changes in working rules.
Pacific Electric is a commuter line from Los Angeles to Long Beach and other Southern California areas and hauls extensive freight around the Los Angeles harbor.
Hearing To Begin Grain Investigation
Wayne Marteney, 40, president of the corporation, will be the principal witness. His testimony was expected to clear up the mysterious ramifications of the case.
Dodge City—(U.P.)-A hearing before E. R. Sloan, federal referee for bankruptcy in Kansas, today was expected to unravel some of the mystery surrounding the bankrupt Garden Grain and Seed company Garden City.
Marteney has revealed the firm he started less than four years ago has debts totaling about $1,200,000, including several hundred thousand bushels of missing grain.
10 Klansmen Face Federal Charges
Whiteville, S.C.—(U.P.)State and local officials said today the arrest of 10 former Ku Klux Klanmen on kidnapping charges has ended a reign of terror in this area.
"The Klan was developing a reign of terror, for which we have no place in North Carolina," commented Gov. Kerr Scott. "I think people are pretty happy about it (the arrests)."
The government Indicated Sunday it may ask the death penalty for the nightriders, who were charged with kidnapping two persons.
TV Show Awards ToBe Given Today
Hollywood—(U.R.)-The six TV "bests" of 1951 will receive the gold "Emmy" award of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences tonight at the fourth annual awards dinner.
Winners judged by academy members to be the cream of the year's video crop will become known when the names are taken from sealed envelopes by president Mike Stokey at 9 p.m.
Television editors of daily and trade papers throughout the country nominated the candidates.
Finalists in the voting in the six "best" classifications are:
Best dramatic show: Celanese Theater, Philco Goodyear TV Playhouse, Pulitzer Prize Playhouse, Robert Montgomery Presents, Studio One.
Best comedy show: Burns a Allen, Groucho Marx, Herb Shriner Show, I Love Lucy, Red Skelton.
Best variety show; All Star Revue, Comedy Hour, Fred Waring Show, Toast of the Town, Your Show of Shows.
Best actress: Imogene Coca, Helen Hayes, Maria Riva, Mary Sinclair, Margzret Sullivan.
Best actor: Sid Caesar, Walter Hampden, Thomas Mitchell, Robert Montgomery, Vaughn Taylor.
Best comedian or comedienne:
Lucille Ball, Imagine Coca, Jimmy
Durante, Martin and Lewis, Herb
Shriner, Red Skelton.
SWA To Give Awards For Hometown Stories
Statewide Activities is sponsoring a contest for the best group of articles concerning KU and activities pertaining to the hometown community correspondents.
String books will be judged and winners announced near the end of this semester. First prize of $25, second prize of $15, third prize of $10 and five prizes of $5 each we be awarded.
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KU Students Display Mixed Emotions On Question Of UMT
end of $25.
prize of each vote.
Campus opinions vary widely concerning the bill for Universal Military training recently introduced in Congress.
Veterans generally favored UMT to help make "men out of boys." Opinion among woman students seemed to be split 50-50, and comments from men subject to the draft, ranged from the philosophical to the resigned.
One stallum supporter decided that UMT is "something every red-blooded American boy should have—like his first drink of whiskey." A practical college sophomore maintained that "The only reason I'm opposed to it is because I'd be in it."
All 18-year-olds would "be in it" for a training period of six months if the UMT bill now before Congress is passed. The implication is
that only a limited number would be taken at first. Congress is contemplating taking about 60,000 a year.
After the training period, seven and one-half years in reserve status is required. This includes the guarantee that reservists will not be called to active duty for more than 30 days without Congressional approval.
The six months training would be comparable to the orientation and basic training given regular servicemen. In emergencies, men who have completed their training could be prepared faster for combat.
Congress committed itself to the principle of UMT by passing draft legislation last June. Congress is divided on the main problem, when and how UMT should be started.
As Congressional opinion is divided, so is the opinion of University students.
Women expressing opinions for the UMT proposal maintained it was "necessary in the present situation." A college freshman decided, "We shouldn't be caught off-guard like we were in the last war."
Veterans admit that the service has certain "undesirable elements," but feel that six months' training "would not be bad for the nation's youth."
One veteran summed up the argument by saying, "The situation is getting in this day and age where a boy of 17 or 18 has to mature fast, and that's one way of doing it."
"Everybody's going in sooner or later, and that little training certainly won't hurt," is the resigned attitude many college men are showing.
"It would definitely be damaging to culture and to the American people to take away persons from their training in science and arts," one fine arts junior said.
in the United States, there would be enough money to build an educational institution in each county with money left over."
Other women contended that "six months' training was not enough to do any good." A college junior came up with the idea that, "If all the money used for UMT in one year were given to all the counties
A pre-dental student favoring the UMT plan said, "UMT is fairer than the draft because it would allow a student, after his six months training, to complete his education."
An education freshman thought "UMT would be a good thing because it would give the boys a chance to get some practical knowledge before starting college."
Still another opinion expressed faith in the present draft system. "It's practically the same thing." a college sophomore said. "That it's military training can't be denied, and it's universal because everyone has to go."
"History shows us that instead of preparing a nation, it instills militarism in daily life to a point where people seek war as a solution for problems," a business junior said.
Some students said that the training period should be split over two summers. A college senior believed that the trainee "should be able to choose the time when he wants to go in."
Daily Kansan
"UMT is merely a duplication of the present system, and is uneconomical," an education senior contended.
49th Year, No. 92
Quiz Scheduled For Petitioners
A quiz will be given at 7:15 p.m. tdday in 9 Strong hall for the first elimination of those petitioning for an office of the Associated Women Students.
Pettitioners making high scores on the quiz will be invited to a coffee at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the AWS lounge. From these women the elections committee will choose a slate to run in the AWS elections Wednesday, Feb. 27. The new officers with the defeated candidates will comprise the 1952-53 AWS sen-tite
Deadline Slated For Pictures
All graduating seniors must have their pictures taken at Hixon's studio before Monday, March 10. The pictures must be taken before that date in order that they may appear in the last issue of the Jay-hawker.
Positions open are president, vicepresident, secretary, treasurer, and two All Student Council representatives, one independent and one Greek.
Featured in the show will be Erika Tatjana Plume, graduate student from Riga, Latvia, who has been in the Olympics.
Tickets for the show go on sale today at the women's physical education office in Robinson for 75 cents. They may also be obtained from individual members.
This is the first time the club has been able to invite men to its water show, June Porter, education junior, said. Since the pool has been enlarged, it will hold 217 persons.
Tonight's quiz will cover the AWS constitution, a study guide issued to the petitioners, AWS rules and regulations and material presented by speakers at the Leadership workshop.
The Quack club will present a water ballet, "A Trip Around the World," at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 27 and Thursday, Feb. 28, in the Robinson gym pool.
Thirty-nine women have filed petitions for office as compared with 46 last year, Loretta Cooley, chairman of the elections committee, said. She requested that all women taking the quiz bring their own pencils. Paper will be furnished.
Members of the elections committee other than Miss Cooley are Enaulene Gooch, Beverly Jennings and Helene Steinbuchel, college seniors; Arden Angen and Donna McCosh, education seniors, and Virginia Thomson, business senior.
QuackClubToGive Water Ballet
Lab Play Tryouts To Be Held Today
Tryouts for future lab theater plays will be held at 4:30 and 7:30 p.m. today in 105 Green hall.
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1952
Two of the plays to be cast are "Why I Am a Bachelor" and "Half an Hour." Frank LaBan, college junior, will direct the former and Kay Peters, fine arts senior, will direct the latter. Both are doing this as part of their work in Professor Allen Crafton's play directing class.
Psychology Professor To Attend Meeting
"Half an Hour" was written by J. M. Barrie, British playwright.
Herbert F. Wright, professor of psychology, will attend and participate in a work conference in Atlantic City Friday through Sunday.
Pep Organizations To Sit In Reserved Section Tonight
The conference is concerned with problems of social behavior and personality. The conferees, who are investigators representing several areas of research in the social sciences, will be concerned especially with methods and problems in interdisciplinary collaboration.
The conference will be conducted under a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health.
All members of the Jay Janes and KuKu pep clubs must be seated in the reserved pep section by 7 p.m. to Oklahoma A&M hasketball game.
Members of the Red Peppers and Froshawks' freshman pep club, who have the number one game ticket should also be in the section by 7:00 p.m. Roll calls will be taken.
2 Visitors Here To Discuss Jobs
Two women will be on the campus today and Wednesday to discuss job opportunities for women in the Army and with Hall Brothers, Inc.
Capt. Evelyn Girard, Women's Medical Specialist Corps of the 95th Army headquarters in Chicago, will speak at 4 p.m. today in the dean of women's office, 220 Strong, about job opportunities.
The meetings will be open to all women students interested.
Marguerite L. Kuna, of the personnel department of Hall Brothers, will talk at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the AWS lounge on the different jobs available with the company in Kansas City.
Captain Girard will also have conferences with students in occupational therapy, physical therapy, and diatetics to tell them about opportunities in the Women's Medical Specialist Corps.
Wednesday from 8 until 10 a.m., Captain Girard will be available in the AWS lounge to talk to anyone interested in knowing more about jobs in the WMSC. Thursday she will go to the University Medical center in Kansas City to talk to women students there.
The All Student council meeting scheduled for tonight has been postponed until 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 106 Strong hall. James Logan, ASC president, said the change was made because of the KU-Oklahoma Aggies game being scheduled for tonight, the regular meeting time of the ASC.
ASC Meeting Postponed
Irene E. C.
MARILYN BARR
UNESCO To Aid Education In India
The UNESCO gift coupon plan to aid education in India, which has been adopted by the county council in New Delphi India, was discussed by P. N. Varughese, graduate student from Travancore, India, and Charles Satterfield, college senior, Monday.
They spoke at a men's brotherhood meeting of the Evangelical United Brethren church at Worden in behalf of the Douglas county council for UNESCO.
"This project shows wonderful international spirit," Mr. Satterfield said.
Through this plan, Mr. Satterfield said, Christians will aid education of adults in New Delphi, about one half of whom are Hindu refugees from Pakistan.
The coupon book will enable the recipient to purchase educational, scientific or cultural equipment at cost.
Two large projection screens, five amplifiers having four speakers each and two silent films to be used by the 19 adult education centers in New Delphi will be purchased for the project.
Chemists Continue Energy Research
Before you can have a nuclear energy-propelled car or an atomic furnace in your home, science will have to find suitable materials with which to utilize nuclear energy.
The University is continuing this research with a contract from the atomic energy commission for $10,-962. In announcing the contract today, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said that Dr. Paul W. Gilles, assistant professor of chemistry, would continue as director of the research.
In the past two years, KU has had contracts from the commission involving more than $9,000 each. This work has not only provided valuable research information for the commission, but also has enabled two students to get advanced degrees. Both are associated with the commission at present.
Aiding in the search are University chemists. They are seeking practical substances that can be used at the high temperatures essential for transforming nuclear energy into useful forms.
A third student at work on the project is Quentin de Lattice Wheatley. He has accepted employment at Oak Ridge when he finishes the work for the doctor of philosophy degree this year.
John L. Margrave, who received the doctor of philosophy degree in 1951, has a post-doctoral fellowship at Berkeley, Calif. Paul J. Richardson, who received the master's degree in 1950, is working at Hanford, Wash.
The other two scientists are Thomas A. Milne and Bernard D. Pollock, graduate students. Both are working toward their doctor of philosophy degrees.
The number of materials that can be used in high-temperature work is limited. Many of the classical ones are unsuitable for nuclear energy purposes. Dr.Gilles said.
One of the metals that may be
suitable to some extent is titanium. We are principally concerned with the study of titanium monoxide gas which will help us determine the behavior of titanium under high temperatures." Dr. Gilles explained
Dr. Gilles said that it is quite possible that within the next 10 years titanium metal will have wide use. It has many desirable structural properties, is lighter than iron and is abundant.
Another aspect of the problem is to study the energy required to tear molecules apart. This aspect of the research is important because of the use of fluorine as a rocket fuel.
In their search for suitable materials, the chemists will be working with borides, which are relatively new substances that have extremely high melting points. The objectives of boride work are to determine the composition and/or durability vaporization and to determine the heats for these processes.
Senior To Play Piano Recital
Marilyn Barr will be presented by the School of Fine Arts in a senior piano recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Strong auditorium.
Miss Barr has been on the dean's honor roll of the School of Fine Arts each semester of her four years here.
She is a student of Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano. She began her piano studies at the age of nine with Mrs. W. B. Dalton, formerly of Lawrence, now living in Topeka.
She was president of Sigma Alpha Iota, national music sorority, and vice-president of the Light Opera guild. She is now treasurer of the A Cappella choir and organist at the Trinity Episcopal church.
Miss Barr is a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Company Consultant To Address Group
She is the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Harold G. Barr, 1300 Oread.
After receiving her degree from KU in June, Miss Barr plans to go to New York to get a master's degree in music.
"One Hundred Years of Research on Cholesterol and Related Sterols" will be the subject of a talk by Dr. Oliver Kamm, consultant to the Parke Davis company, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in 205 Bailey.
Dr. Kamm, former professor of organic chemistry at Michigan and Illinois universities, is the author of the first textbook on organic qualitative analysis. He has made numerous contributions to organic and medicinal chemistry.
A temporary exhibition gallery in the Museum of Art is almost finished and will be ready for use the first week in March, Prof. John Maxon, director of the museum, announced today.
Dr. Kamm is sponsored by the University section of the American Chemical society.The public is invited.
Temporary Gallery Set Up In Museum
The new gallery will be in the east end of the museum's lower floor. It will be constructed so that both pictures and objects may be displayed beneath glass.
"Treasures from Northeast Kansas" will be the first exhibition display shown in the new gallery.
Mrs. Jukes To Talk On Radio Program
Mary Lou Jukes, graduate student who has the lead in "The Lady's Not For Burning," will be on the KU Calvacade of Hits program on KFKU at 7 p.m. today.
Mrs. Jukes will talk about the difficulties encountered by the actors in practicing for "The Lady's Not For Burning," the University's third major play beginning Feb. 27.
KU Calvacade of Hits is a compilation of the top tunes of the week at KU as determined by a campuswide postcard survey.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
Brotherhood Week Is Year-Round Campaign
This is Brotherhood week.. For one seven-day period of the year we pause in our busy lives and publicly announce that we don't care what color, creed or race a man is. We say we are ready to greet him as our neighbor.
All this is fine. The attitudes which are promoted by the movement are noble. Most persons will find themselves in complete agreement with the purposes expressed. The idea of being neighborly is an old American custom.
But why do we have to have a special week to feel this way? Is it that we have so completely forgotten our American tradition that a big-time campaign is necessary? Have we become so concerned with reaping the benefits of the American tradition that we have forgotten to follow that tradition?
During this week we will read of the closeness of all persons regardless of individual differences. We will read of the unity of purpose of the religious groups. Most of us will rejoice with the thought that it is good to live in a country where such is possible.
His Light Makes Men Brothers
But how much can the good work and words of this one week do toward counteracting the examples of bigotry which are present during the other 51 weeks of the year?
Headline tell of an Iowa cemetery refusing to bury the body of a soldier killed fighting in Korea because he was of Indian ancestry. Just last week the residents of an all-white neighborhood in California voted seven to one against admitting a Chinese family. The residents of a suburb near a large Eastern city protested the construction of a church because it was not one of the "accepted" denominations.
It may sound futile to tak about brotherhood when half the world is trying to deny the meaning of the word. On the other hand, this is precisely the best time to make sure we understand fully what it implies.
Unless brotherhood is practiced at all times here there is little reason to believe we can sell it abroad. If we can't sell it abroad we cannot hope to end the dangerous ideological struggle in which we now are engaged.
We must take the message from this one week of demonstrated brotherhood and keep it before us as a guide for all the other weeks throughout the year. —Joe Taylor.
short ones
The Defense department has issued a draft call for dentists, and no doubt they will be the best drilling bunch of recruits the Army has ever had.
Understatement of the week:
After Mrs. Roberto (Ingrid Bergman) Rossellini announced her second child will be born in June, her husband said he hoped this would convince people of the seriousness of their marriage.
Looks like the guys whooping it up for a gas strike finally ran out of gas.
Justice was found wanting when an Elizabeth in England became queen while an Elizabeth in New Jersey got hit by three airplanes.
What ever happened to Captain Kurt Carlsen? Maybe he's taking a vacation with General MacArthur on a flying saucer.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room
KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn, Inland Daily Press Assn,
Associated Press, National Information Association, and by the National Advertising Service, 420 North Avenue, New York City.
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief...Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants...Anne Zimmer, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor Ellsworth Zahm
Assistant Managing Editors Helen Law Fay, Ben Halman,
Joe Lostelic, Jim Powers
City Editor Jeannie Lambert
Assistant City Editors Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newman
Telegraph Editor Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
Assistant Telegraph Editor Charles Burch
Society Editor Max Thompson
Society Editor Dianne Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors Lorena Barlow, Pauline Patterson
Sports Editor Jackie Jones
News Advisor Victor J. Danilov
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS START
Business Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager ... Emory Williams
National Advertising Manager ... Virginia Johnston
Circulation Manager ... Ted Barbara
Classified Advertising Manager ... Eline Mitchell
Promotion Manager ... Phil Wilcox
Business Advisor ... R. W. Doares
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence), Published in Lawrence, Kan, every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
ALL PEOPLES
Limelight For Schuman Plan Following Statement By 'Ike'
With the mention by General Eisenhower that the powers of Western Europe should hold a convention to draw up a European federation, the Schuman plan is again in the limelight.
Briefly, the plan proposes that seven nations—Great Britain, France, Western Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, The Netherlands and Italy—form a continental economic community.
A national assembly would be set up to control the international authority that would run the cold-steel pool. This assembly then would be a springboard to organize a federated Europe.
French Foreign minister Robert Schuman, author of the plan, says that the pool would not be a cartel, an international business organization, because it would expand, rather than restrict production of steel and coal, and give Europeans more goods at lower prices and raise their standard of living.
Perhaps the most important effect of the proposal would be to unite two nations, France and Western Germany, which for centuries have been involved in bloody competition. With their unification a major source of trouble in Europe could be eliminated
—Max A. Thompson.
The early spring weather must be turning some of our young men's thoughts prematurely (if not lightly) to love. In case Tennyson was right, sympathize with the faculty. Yesterday a physics professor stood on his head and not a student blinked.
Letters:
Foreign Language Helps Students
Dear Sir:
Each semester begins with a healthy swipe taken at the foreign language requirement. You said in an editorial on Feb. 14: "The average student is hard to sell on the value of courses not directly related to his major field." The key word here is "average". It is hard to sell the average student on any course that will involve any more than a minimum of effort . . .
... Look at some of the so-called themes that are handed into the English department . . . (and) . . at the number of students who flunk the English proficiency examination. The beauty of a foreign language is that the student can't . . . (pass) . . the course without knowing a verb from a noun.
William L. K. Schwarz College senior.
... The only way to spare the poor, overworked student is either to conquer the peoples of the world and make them speak English, or perhaps let the Russians beat us and we will all have the privilege of learning Russian.
You also say the best way to understand a foreign country is to study its history, politics and economics. This is true, but before anyone can . . . (understand) . . . any of these problems the language of the nation involved is necessary . . .
Comments ..
Gives Sportsmanship Lesson
The Tennessee Tech Oracle decided recently to give its readers a lesson in sportsmanship. It declared in an editorial:
"...We would like to mention an incident that reportedly occurred at the Tech-Evansville basketball game. Of course, Evansville is a northern team—a team that is due just as much respect and honor as any other team whether from the North, South, East or West.
"we wonder how the Evansville coach must have felt when someone told him, 'Why don't you sit down—you yankee.' It is perfectly all right to boo the official when you feel like it—and who doesn't on one occasion or another—but it is certainly a most asinine thing to make any degrading remarks to an individual."
Winchell Becomes Target Of Verbal Blasts
Along about the middle of January the New York Post took its editorial tool box and happily began to nail columnist Walter Winchell's hide to the barn door of its news columns.
The Post ran a front page banner for a special series, called "Inside Winchell."
The Post serial charged:
1. That an obscure young man in Bayside N.Y., is Winchell's chief ghost writer; that Winchell's attorney influenced his opinions; that press agents covet his favor and fear his wrath; and that he badgers loyalty from friends.
3. The "baddies" (underworld characters) have staked their newsboy pal to some pretty good beats. During the Kefauver hearings, Winchell ran a column of anecdotes in which he remembered "all sorts of things about Frank Costello—all nice," and followed it up with an exclusive interview picturing him "as an authority on how to stamp out crime."
2. That "... he is handicapped only by misinformation, lack of knowledge, capricious judgment, and a cultivated aversion for the reading of books."
The Post also found enough errors in Winchell's column to run a daily box of Winchell "Wrongos" and his carefully disguised corrections. Example—"Irving Berlin, the poor songwriter, netted only $650,000 (after taxes) in 1946." Two days later came the veiled retraction—"Irving Berlin says the report that he made $650,000 (after taxes)
The real reason seems to be that the Post is extremely race conscious, and was after Winchell because he had been critical of Negro Josephine Baker for her claim that racial discrimination had resulted in poor service for her at Winchell's favorite handout, the Stork club.
Time reported on Feb. 4 that Winchell was ordered by his doctors to take a complete rest for a month and that the Post had promptly postponed the last six installments of its Winchell articles.
The reason for the Post series? Newsweek says "the Post has made a specialty of exposing columnists whose views are to the right of the Post's."
Publisher of the Post, Dorothy Schiff, said, "maybe this series . . . will bring him to his senses, and he will cease his evil, vindicative campaigns against individuals who have displeased him."
The reason given by the Post for the postpone- ment:
is bunk."
Maybe the answer to the whole affair lies in a page one reference to Winchell's column, which was run in Winchell's home paper, the New York Mirror. The headline gave a page reference to Walter's regular column (which didn't even mention the Post blast) and said:
"We believe in the old journalistic principle that a newspaper should not argue with a man while he isn't in a position to answer back."
"There's Only One Walter Winchell."
Tuesday, Feb. 19. 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
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Radio Schedule
Tuesday
The week's schedule of programs to be heard on KFKU, University radio station, found at 1250 on the radio dial.
Jayhawk Junior
Classroom ... 2:30 p.m.
Art by Radio; Cut Paper, taught
by Maud Ellsworth, associate
professor of education.
KU Cavalcade of Hits ... 7 p.m.
The top tunes of the week on
Mt. Oread.
Memo Pad ... 7:25 p.m.
A collection of cultural events
in the Kansas City, Lawrence
and Topeka area.
Wednesday
Jayhawk Junior
classroom ... 2:30 p.m.
Prairie Footprints; "Trade With
New Mexico."
KU in the news ... 2:45 p.m.
Tom Yoe reporting the Uni-
versity news of the week.
Concert Hall ... 7 p.m.
Featuring Marian Anderson,
Alexander Brallowsky, John
McCormack, William Primrose,
Victor Chorale and the London
Philharmonic orchestra.
Thursday
classroom 2:30 p.m
Adventures in Music Land:
"King of the Piano and Abbe
Weimar-Franz Liszt."
Brainbusters
busters ... 7 p.m.
Allen Crafton, professor in
speech (master of ceremonies);
Emil L. Tellel, associate profes-
sor (journalist). Mrs. James
E. Seaver (whose husband is
assistant professor of history);
Rev. Dale Turner, professor in
the school of religion, and William A. Conby, instructor of speech.
Friday
Jayhawk Junior
classroom ... 2:30 p.m.
Story Book Train: "The General
Did Wrong," told by the
Old Conductor storyteller, Robert
Calderwood, associate professor emeritus of speech.
Museum of Art
Organ Recital ... 2:45 p.m.
Jerald Hamilton at the Console.
Chamber Music ... 7 p.m.
Schumann Piano Quintet in E
Camp Jobs Open Now
Summer job opportunities in camps, hotels, and canning companies are now available to men students seeking summer employment.
The Silver Spruce camp for Boys, in Durango, Colo., has openings for counselorships for the 1952 season from June 20 to Aug. 19. There are two terms and applicants may apply for one or both. Those interested should write: Forrest E. Groves, General director, Camp Silver Spruce, P. O. Box 1507, Durango, Colo.
Camp Wood YMCA camp near Elmdale, Kan., needs a waterfront director, an assistant waterfront director, a director of the archery range, outcamps, and hiking, a crafts assistant and an athletic supervisor.
The Rogers Canning company of Milton-Freewater, Oregon, employs students during the season from June 10 to the last week in July. The past year the company paid a base rate of $1.14 an hour to men and 95 cents an hour to women.
Cheley, Colorado camps hire camp counselors every summer. Men interested in a position as counselor in the camps should call Mrs. Herman B. Chubb, phone 738.
Positions at Camp Wood pay a salary plus living expenses. The camp is open the entire summer. Students may get application blanks in the office of the dean of men.
The Imperial hotel, Cripple Creek, Colo., employs students during the summer vacation. Application blanks for the jobs also are in the office of the dean of men.
Deer Hunting Made Easier
Tilton N. H.—(U.P.)-When Mrs. Joshua Dean yelled "There's a deer outside," her son Dudley leaped from bed, grabbed his gun and, clad only in shorts, dashed out in freezing weather and bagged a nine-point duck.
Professor Finishes Vegetation Map
By JERRY RENNER
A University professor has made a detailed vegetation map of the United States for Rand McNally and company which will show all of the natural plant life of the country.
Dr. A. William Kuchler, associate professor of geography, has worked for nearly a year modeling it after a vegetation map of the world he published two years ago in the Encyclopedia Britannica atlas.
He has made several vegetation maps including one of Manchuria, one of the world, and of sections of Michigan and New York.
"Making a map involves more than coloring one area green for thick forests and one gray for scent vegetation." Dr. Kuchler said. "The difficult phase of map making is developing and refining the classification into which one may put all the different kinds of trees and floral growth."
To the layman a tree is a tree and grass is grass, but it is more complicated than that, he said. There are maple trees and hemlocks, evergreens, palms, sequoias, bay trees,
mosses, lichens, succulents and epiphytes which grow on other plants and innumerable other natural growths.
The project began by classifying all plant into major categories of woody and herbaceous. The woody plants were subdivided into plants that are broad-leaved, needle-leaved, or evergreen.
The finished map shows the height and density of the vegetation, the regional habitat as well as floral aspects. Some of the things it shows are the trees particular to New England, the redwoods of California, the cypress of the South, Western sage brush, Texas blue bonnets, and the sunflowers of the Mid-west.
After the woody plants were classified, Dr. Kuchler began classifying the herbaceous ones made up of grass or grass-like plants.
tered to indicate the vegetation in any particular region.
If a student saw the letters "Dpt" on the map, he would be able to consult the legend and learn the area was covered with broad-leaved, deciduous woody plants ("D") of a minimum height of 75 feet ("t") in loosely scattered patches ("p").
The product is shaded and let-
The map will appear in "Goode's School Atlas" and will be used in geography classes at the University.
PHOTOS COPIED
wallet or application size photos
20 wallet size $1.00
deluxe.print
original picture returned send any size photo or notation
p. o. box 2448, Kansas City 6, Mo.
FEDERAL WALLET SIZE PHOTO CO.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
It's War!
In my art class there is one I do without a flaw, And thats to sketch a Lucky Strike — They're easy on the draw!
Hilary Solomon
Univ. of California at Berkeley
LUCKY STRIKE
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CIGARETTES
I have to study I'm not a But something Was L.S./
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In my art class there is one thing I do without a flaw, And that's to sketch a Lucky Strike — They're easy on the draw!
Hilary Solomon
Univ. of California at Berkeley
Be Happy-
GO LUCKY!
LUCKIES TASTE BETTER!
The difference between "just smoking" and really enjoying your smoke is the taste of a cigarette. You can taste the difference in the smoother, mellower, more enjoyable taste of a Lucky ... for two important reasons. First, L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike means fine tobacco ... fine, mild tobacco that tastes better. Second, Luckies are made to taste better ... proved best-made of all five principal brands. So reach for a Lucky. Enjoy the cigarette that tastes better! Be Happy—Go Lucky! Buy a carton today!
No pain, no strain when smokes are low.
No rush to buy a pack – I keep a Lucky carton near,
And smokes I never lack!
Hunter S. Seabright
University of North Carolina
I have to study hard each day;
I'm not a brain you see – But something that I quickly learned
Was L.S./M.F.T.
Ruth Wolff
Smith College
L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco
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University of North Carolina
have to study hard each day;
I'm not a brain you see —
But something that I quickly learned
Was L.S./M.F.T.
Ruth Wolff
Smith College
L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike
Means Fine Tobacco
© A.T. Co.
Page 4
University Daily Kansas
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1952
KU Faces Aggies In Game Tonight
The Kansas Jayhawkers will take on the nation's top defensive basketball team tonight, when the Oklahoma Aggies come to Hoch auditorium. Tipoff time is 7:35.
The Kansas squad is now riding on the crest of a 90 to 52 victory over the Nebraska Cornhuskers, while the Aggies are suffering from a 65 to 61 defeat at the hands of their oldest rival, the Oklahoma Sooners. The contest went into two overtime periods before the Sooners were able to halt A&M.
At the present time, the Aggies are ranked at the top of the nation's defensive teams, and whether this ability to stop the opposition will hold true tonight remains to be seen.
in their last meeting at Stillwater, the Aggies defeated the Jayhawkers, handing them one of their two losses this season.
Clyde Lovellette, Kansas' All-American center, scored 36 points in the contest against Nebraska, and if he should do as well against Oklahoma, he would again raise his average to above twenty-six points per game.
In the game with Nebraska Saturday, Kansas was suffering from the loss of Bill Lienhard due to a cold, and if the entire squad is not back in top shape by Tuesday, the Oklahoma's will stand a good chance of tripping Coach Allen's Jayhawkers.
In over-all play, the Kansas record is considerably better than that of
the Aggies, with KU holding a season record of 17-2, while A&M has a season total of 18-5.
In conference games, Kansas has suffered defeat only at the hands of the Kansas State Wildcats, while the Aggies have been able to win only two and have lost three.
Nevertheless the Oklahoma squad has been able to successfully hold down the usually high scoring teams, and none of their losses have been by wide margins.
The game tonight should offer plenty of speed and some excellent basketball for the spectators to watch.
Kansas "B" Trips Baker
The Kansas "B" basketball squad defeated Baker university, 67-66 in an overtime period at Baldwin.
Allan Keney sank a heell goal in the last 10 seconds of the period to give KU its margin of victory.
Kelley, who had hit to put the Jayhawker "B" squad ahead 65-64 came back to score the clincher after Baker had taken the lead with 30 seconds left to play.
Kelley led the Kansas scoring
Foster, Tri-Delts Meet For Crown In I-M Basketball
Foster hall and Delta Delta Delta will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in Robinson gym in the final game of the women's intramural basketball schedule.
To the winner of this contest will go the Hill championship trophy. Both of these squads remain undefeated through the regular season and the semi-finals of intramural play.
Foster has the best forward combination in intramurals, but is the weaker of the two squads in defense.
Shirley Mickelson. Ernestine Dehlinger and Anita Philipp should start at forward for Foster.
One of the tri-Delt forwards, Marilyn Marhofer, will not see action, so their forward combination will be Pat Garrett, Chloe Warner and Shirley Wilkie.
The starting tri-Delt guards probably will be Joan Carter, Mary Loveless and Grace Endacott, while Virginia Brooks, Jappy Rau and Marlene Peterson should start for Foster.
This game will find some of the top women basketball players on the campus in action. Eleven of the players on the two teams have been named to class teams, with Mickelson and Dehinger of Foster both members of last year's varsity squad.
with 23 points; Ken Buller scored
4. Jerry Alberts had 6, Everett Dye
scored 6, LaVannes Squires scored
4, Wesley Whitney had 13, John
Anderson has 8 and Jerry Bogue
scored 1.
Intramural Round-Up
HILL CHAMPIONSHIP
Wednesday
Division A
8:15 p.m.
Beta Theta Pi - Dark Horses
Division B
Beta Theta Pi - Dark Horses Division B
p.m.
Beta Theta Pi - AFROTC
Division C
9:15 p.m.
Varsity House - Phi Gamma Delta
Four Rifle Squads To Hold Match
The Air Force ROTC Rifle队 will be host to squads from three universities at a shoulder - to - shoulder match March 1.
The matches will be fired on the range in the basement of the Military Science building.
Guest teams will be the varsity squads from the University of Nebraska, the University of Wichita and Washburn university. Ten men will fire from each team in the all-day match.
The following weekend two KU Air Force teams, composed of four men each, will travel to Kemper Military school, Boonville, Mo., for the Midwest Camp Perry Rifle match.
Sgt. Harold G. Swartwood, the KU Air Force ROTC Rifle team coach, said that he plans to take an advanced team and a basic team to the Midwest match.
He said that the team has just completed shooting the preliminary matches for the Tenth Air Force Area Collegiate Rifle match. The three high teams in' the Tenth Air
Force area will compete in the National Intercollegiate match.
He expects to learn the results of the preliminary contest within few weeks.
Don't Delay
Any Longer . . .
Space is still available on several good travel plans to Europe for summer vacation.
But record advanced bookings for trans-Atlantic transportation is completely filling all air and ship tours. Don't delay your reservations any longer. See Downs today for your trip arrangements. No service charge. No booking fee.
24 HOUR SERVICE
Phone 3661 Open Evenings
Mrs. Lois Odaffer
Mr. Joe Brown
downs
travel service
1015½ massachusetts st.
lawrence, kansas
Royal Has Taken A Furlough And Is NOW AVAILABLE To You
Remember about a year and a half ago when the biggest news in auto safety and economy was the U.S. ROYAL MASTER WHITE SIDEWALL TIRE? Then came the UN police action and white sidewalls and the ROYAL MASTERS went to war. But now, once again, we have the newer better ROYAL MASTER white sidewalls in most popular sizes.
YOU'VE READ THE STORY, now we would like for you to come down to our shop and let us show the ROYAL MASTERS to you. We'll demonstrate them for you and show you more of the exclusive ROYAL features than is possible to mention here. Come in now, while we still have your tire size.
Rapid Transit Service
Mobilgas Service
Phone 1300
WHY TALK TIRES IN A COLLEGE PAPER? For one good reason. When you buy you want the very best for a reasonable price. That's why we present this information to you. ROYAL MASTERS naturally cost more than the ordinary tire. But ROYAL MASTERS cost much less than three tires, or even two tires, and that's what you're getting, three in one. Also we offer a very liberal trade-in on your old tire.
WHAT makes these tires outstanding? Well, setting aside all of the technical improvements, the ROYAL MASTER has three main features. They are:
1. THE THREE IN ONE FEATURE. The ROYAL is a tire that will last, because it is made with three times as much rubber as ordinary tires. Each time you wear down the tread on the ROYAL MASTER you simply bring it back to us, and we'll put a new tread on it, retaining all of the safety features, but without the cost of recapping.
2. NON-SKID PROTECTION. Because of a new tread design on the ROYAL MASTER tires, you get non-skid traction in any weather. The tread actually bites down into snow, ice, and mud.
3. And feature three is 'AIR RIDE.' The US ROYAL MASTER white sidewall combines safety and durability into one tire that also offers the luxury of 'AIR RIDE' driving . . . low pressure tires that take the bumps and loops out of driving.
1001 Mass.
NEED TIME?
Type those reports, themes, or theses and save time. Also get better grades.
Rent a Typewriter Today
Hall's Standard
The first $14 in rental can apply on the purchase of a typewriter.
STUDENT Union Book Store
Page 5
ts of in
Na-
Beta Theta Pi Captures Fraternity "A" Title
Beta Theta Pi won the Fraternity "A" basketball championship Monday evening, as they defeated Delta Upsilon 36-27.
The largest crowd of the season was at which featured a DU signed hand.
University Daily Kansan
Beta Theta Pi took an early lead and held it to the final whistle. At 10-6, he won the first quarte. Beta led 10-6, at the half time as the final stanza began it was 33-23.
Hal Cleavanger led Beta with 14 points, 12 of them coming in the second half, but scoring honors of the night went to DU's Jerry Taylor who was able to tally 18 points.
The Dark Horses won the independent "A" championship with a tough 54-40 victory over Stephenson.
The Dark Horses led by a single point, 22-21, at the half, but turned the game into an easy victory with a second half scoring flurry. Going into the final quarter, they led 40-28
Bud Laughlin and Pat Murphy led the Dark Horses with 14 and 13 points respectively. Walt Haskins of Stephenson both led teams with 15.
Beta Theta Pi took the Fraternity "B" championship with a 36-30 victory over Phi Gamma Delta.
Women Teams Selected To Play In Basketball Games
An "A" and "B" squad is selected each season from the top players in intramural competition and these teams play for the class championship.
The women's intramural basketball class teams have been selected, and the class games are scheduled to start at 7 p.m. Wednesday.
The senior "A" and freshman "A"
teams will meet at 7, as will the
senior "B" and freshman "B". At 8,
the junior "A" team will meet the
sophomore "A" and the junior "B"
will face the sophomore "B".
Albert Mullikan and Dick Docking led the Beta attack with 12 and 10 points.
The winners of these contests in both brackets will meet Feb. 26, as will the losers.
Members of the senior "A" squad are: Ernestine Dehlinger, Shirley Mickelson, Sydney Ashton, Barbara Quinn, Sue Neff, Nancy Seaman, Margaret Gowans and Shirley Townsend.
The junior "A" team includes:
Shirley Wilkie, Shirley Thomson,
Jayden Jones, Juan Bradshaw,
Joyce Jones, Jean Michael, Marvin Miller and Betty Clinger.
Senior "B" team members are:
Mary Dixon, Chloe Warner, Anita
Philipp, Doraine Wiegel, Jappy Rau,
Marianne Crossby and Ada Watson.
The sophomore "A" squad includes: Pat Garrett, "M" Ann Ma-
Junior "B" team members are: Esther Harms, Allie Grove, Joan Fink, Jackie Jones, Louise Koppers, Connie Maus, Marlene Peterson, Rosemary Scheuerman and Christine Johnson.
A 20-foot set shot by Jack Barr with 1:51 gone in the sudden-death period gave Phi Gamma the verdict. Bob Kay, who scored 19 points for Lambda Chi, put in a jump shot with six seconds left to send the game into the second overtime. The score was tied 27-27 at the end of regulation time.
AFROTOC defeated Varsity House 28-20 to take the Independent "B" championship. Lloyd Kirk led the AFROTOC attack with 12 points.
BOOKS FOR GIFTS and for your own reading
In the top thriller of the evening, Phi Gamma Delta defeated Lambda Chi Alpha 35-33 in two overtimes to take the Fraternity "C" championship.
Margaret
Melville, Goodwin, USA
Wouk Caine Mutiny
Semarque Spark of Life
Llovd C. Dougalas
Time to Remember DuMaurier
My Cousin Rachel Kimbrough
Through Charley's Door Carey Jumping Jupiter Vestal Queen of Cow-
towns, Dodge City
Teale
North with the Spring Stone The President's Lady Agnes DeMille
Dance to the Piper Bertrand Russell
New Hopes for a Chang- ining World
You are invited to come in and see them. We glady wrap for mailing.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Phone 666
honey, Anne MacLaughlin, Carolyn Neff, Virginia Brooks, Nancy Gilchrist, Eloise Feuerborn and Helen Pendleton.
Sophomore "B" members are:
Phyllis Sims, JoAnn Stone, Luella
Schmalzikal Bettie Muir, Marilyn
Klecker, Joan
Squires and Sue Qiuenn
Freshman "A" "squad includes:
Mary Demeritt, Flavia Robertson,
Bianne Baones, Shirley Smith,
Namih Haeney, Elva Sutton and
Marlene Moss.
Kansas Moves To Seventh Spot In AP-UP Polls
The freshman "B" squad includes:
Carolyn Zimmerman, Mary Snead,
Barbara Anderson, Janice Stone,
Dorothy Rexrode, Althea Rexroad,
Marjorie Godwin and Lue Edna
Diver.
Missouri 72, Colorado 55.
Purdue 72, Northwestern 65.
Pittsburgh 62, Notre Dame 60.
Duquesne 76, Cincinnati 64
Cage Scores
Drake 61, Tulsa 53
Oklahoma 65, Nebraska 59
Illinois 77, Indiana 70
Iowa 75, Ohio State 62
The Kansas Jayhawkers moved up two positions to seventh spot in the latest Associated Press basketball ratings.
The KU squad, in ninth place last week, turned in an excellent showing against Nebraska Saturday, and this contributed to their advance in the standings.
The Kentucky Wildcats, already assured of a berth in the NCAA post-season tournament, were named for the first-place college team in the country today.
Kentucky won 885 votes to 754 for the Kansas State Wildcats, who did not win any votes. The K-Staters are presently leading the Big Seven with a 7-0 record.
Illinois (15-2), sharing the Big Ten lead with Iowa, captured fifth place with 479 points. Washington (21-3) got nine first-place votes, from any other team except Kentucky and Kansas State, to take sixth.
There was no change from last week's top ten except for some changes in the standings. St. John's rose from tenth to eighth, St. Bon-
naporta dropped from fourth to tenth, and St. Louis fell from seventh to ninth.
The United Press poll also rates Kansas in the seventh spot, but several others of the top ten are given a different rating.
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1952
Kentucky is in first; Kansas State,
second; Illinois, third; Duquesne,
fourth; Iowa, fifth; Washington,
sixth; St. Louis, eighth; St. John's,
ninth and St. Bonaventure, tenth.
1. Kentucky 895
2. Kansas State 754
3. Duquesne 604
4. Iowa 532
5. Illinois 479
6. Washington 384
7. Kansas 310
8. St. John's 297
9. St. Louis 249
10. St. Bonaventure 193
目
YOUR EYES
Eye
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
After the game
4
REFRESH YOURSELF
at the
COFFEE - ROLLS - SANDWICHES
HAWK'S NEST
FRENCH FRIES-FOUNTAIN ORDERS CANDY
O. Schnellbacher Tops Interceptors
Otto Schnellbacher, the New York Giants defensive star, won the pass interception title in the National Football league last season, official statistics showed today.
Schnellbacher grabbed 11 enemy passes during the season and returned them for 194 yards and two touchdowns, including a 46 yard trot for a counter. He made interceptions in eight of the Giants' 12 games.
Schnellbacher graduated from Kansas in 1948.
PRECIZE
WATCH
REPAIRS
Watch Repair
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1952
Delta Upsilon Fraternity Gives Third Annual Two-Yard Hop
Delta Upsilon fraternity presented its third annual Two-Yard hop Friday night at the chapter house. The party is so-called because each member of the fraternity presents his date with two yards of material from which to make her costume.
Prizes were awarded to Huben Dye, and Nancy Landon, both college sophomores, for the most original costumes. A prize for design made outdoors of material went to Barbara Anderson, college freshman.
The DU's carried out the theme of the dance by decorating the ceiling of the dance floor with large colored pools of thread. Scattered on the dance floor were scraps of material. The windows of the living room were covered with black crepe paper on which were fastened facimiles of scissors and rulers.
the music for the dance was by the Varsity crew. The chaperones were Mrs. James A. Hooke, housemother, Mrs. Edward Dicks, Mrs. Idna M. Stewart and Mrs. Dana L. Anderson.
The guests were Janice Perry, Nancy Gill, Twyla Sue Cox, Billie Coffin, Barbara Findley, Elaine Cook, Mary Middlekauff, Pat Brown, Nancy Landon, Wanda Denney, Norma Mock, Nancy Munger and Margaret Quinley.
Mary Anne Forman, Carol Landis,
Nita Knisel, Connie Mauce, Phyllis
Gray, Anita McCoy, Carol Widrig,
Anitter, Carla Krehbike
Waal, Walah Moree, Paula
Tonam, Sue Grosjean and Lynne
McMillan.
Barbara Heard, Barbara Beers,
Beggy Hughes, Barbara Anderson,
Carol Fuller, Nancy Hutton, JoAnn
Mary, Mary Porel, Beverly Carr-
dine, Margaret Osborn, Moby
immer, Jennie Osborn, Marian
Jenkins and Winifred Meyer.
Mary Ruth Anglund, Joan McKee,
Carol Keller, Jackie Anderson,
Jadelin Frogue, Kathryn North,
Sydney Ashton, Pat Hayes, Gale
Gould, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mason,
r. and Mrs. Charles Schnetzler,
Mr. and Mrs. George Lewey, Sam
Wood, Jack Rodgers, Bob Mayer,
Bud Laughlin and Frank Holfelder.
Square Dance club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Recreation room, Unin Party has been postponed.
Official Bulletin
Jay Janes, 3:30 p.m. Wednesday,
ne. room. Union.
Home Ec. Club, 4 p.m. Thursday,
ning room Fraser hall. Dean Law-
will speak.
5. R. C. 4 today, Myers.
KuKu's, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, 105
een, Important
All KuKu's required to attend game tonight. Obtain opposite set tickets from ticket office.
Psychology club, 7:30 p.m.
hursday, 9 Strong, Dr. Henry
avid from Topeka State Hospital,
maker
Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday,
1 Strong.
Quill club, 7 p.m. Wednesday,
the room, Union.
All Student Council meeting, 7:30
Sir Christopher
"a Third Dimension Beauty"
PATTERN IN
WALLACE
Sterling
6 PIECE place setting $99.50
Gustafson
p. m. Thursday, 106 Strong, due to game tonight.
Phi Mu Alpha, important meeting, 7 p.m. Wednesday, 131 Strong. Pledges attendance required.
Young Democrats meeting, 7:30 tonight. 106 Green. Election of officers.
COLLEGE - JEWELER 809 Mass.
Sigma Delta Chi banquet open to all journalism students. 6 p.m. Friday, Hotel Eldridge. Sign for tickets UDK business office by 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira mercredi a sept heures et demie dans la salle 113 Strong.
Campus Affairs meeting, 7:15
p.m. Wednesday, 222 Strong.
Make application for following positions on "College Daze" and turn in to Student Union Activities office or Dick Klassen by noon Feb. 21. Costumes, make-up, programs, editor, art editor, advertising manager, ticket chairman, secretarial staff, vocal director.
vocal director
Deutscher Verein, Donnerstag 5
p.m. 502 Fraser. Es singt Dale Moor,
am keavier Martha Heck.
Tau Sigma, 7:15 tonight, Robinson gym. Have costumes and dances complete.
Openings for the position of editor and business manager for K-Book, K-Calendar and Student Directory, written applications to be submitted to Bill Stinson, Dean of Men's office. Deadline March 1. For details contact Bill Stinson.
Tryouts for "College Daze" will be held Feb. 25, 26, and 27 in Military Science bldg.
New Dormitory At Kansas State Is Similar To North College Hall
Bv DIANNE STONEBRAKER
A look at the new freshman dormitory plan at Kansas State college reveals that the situations there and those at KU's North College are about the same in nature.
Northwest hall, the new freshman women's residence hall at K-State, opened this fall, as did North College hall. There are 209 women living in Northwest, as compared with approximately 185 freshman women at North College.
Northwest hall has a senior counciling program, as does North College. There are 17 counselors living in the hall. Each counselor meets with her group of freshmen each Thursday night to talk over problems of the group and give advice.
In November a governing body was set up for the hall. By that time it was felt the women knew each other well enough, to elect officers, and a house council was set up with the officers, two representatives from each of the four floors and two counselors. Problems and business of the house are brought up and discussed in the meetings and then taken back to the council groups. A general meeting for all the women is held once a month.
The essential difference between the residence hall at K-State and the one at KU is that at Northwest hall sorority and non-sorority girls live together. There is no deferred
rushing system as we have here There are approximately 60 pledges living in Northwest hall, but there has been no friction between the sorority and independent groups.
There were dining room problems to be straightened out. The women at Northwest had to get used to different flavors in familiar dishes, for cooking for over two hundred persons is quite difficult from cooking in a family. Breakfast and lunch are served cafeteria style on trays. Dinner is eaten family style, eight women at a table with two women acting as hostesses.
Freshman problems vary, as they have at KU, from what to wear to developing systematic study habits. Most of the women say they are happy with the freshman program and they are all very proud of their residence hall.
North College problems and accomplishments are not seclusive. As the tendency toward freshman dormitories is becoming greater in colleges all over the country, there are bound to be the same conflicts, problems and solutions. Women will be women, no matter what the circumstances.
Artelanes
presents
VACATION Anywhere, USA FASHION SHOW
Thursday, February 21 Jayhawker Theatre
8:00 p.m.
ALSO SEE THE MOVIE
"DISC JOCKEY"
STARRING RUSS MORGAN - TOMMY DORSEY
ADELANE'S
Swedish Pastry Is Paden Family Recipe
823 Mass.
A Swedish pastry is a favorite of the family of Mrs. W. D. Paden. Her busband is a professor of English.
Linse Larse in Two Parts
Lance Large in Two Parts Vanilla Cream Filling 2 egg volks.
2 tablespoons sugar.
2 egg yolks.
$1\frac{1}{2}$ teaspoons flour.
1 cup light cream.
1 cup light cream.
2 tablespoons of heavy cream whipped.
wipped.
1. teaspoon vanilla.
Beat egg yolk until thick and lemon colored. Combine sugar and flour and gradually add egg mixture. Cook in top of double boiler over hot water until thickened. Allow to cool. Fold in whipped cream and vanilla.
Pastry
$21 \frac{1}{4}$ cups flour.
$\frac{1}{2}$ teaspoon salt.
1 cup butter.
2 egg yolks.
3 cup sugar.
98c
Sift flour and salt together, cut in butter with pastry blender or two knives. Beat egg yolk until lemon colored. Gradually beat in sugar. Add to flour mixture and blend well. Let stand in refrigerator one-half hour. Roll one-eighth inch thick on a lightly floured board. Line tart shells (muffin tin works well) with dough. Fill with vanilla cream. Cover with round of dough and seal edges. Bake in a moderate oven (325 degrees) for 25 or 30 minutes or until golden brown. Yields 12 tarts.
98c
Rowlands
Semi-Annual
Book Sale
Hundreds of Books on All Subjects YOUR CHOICE AT
98c
Best Bet For Reference Books
1401 OHIO
98c
98c
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Use it after meals
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a
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cut
or until at
in stil
at infri-
gid—one-
ightly with
withs
ream. and
orate
or town.
Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
One day ...50c ...1c
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are acceptée with the understanding that the bill will be accepted during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University of Jackson business office, Journals hldg, 425 345 p.m. the day before publication date.
Three Five
days days
75c $1.00
2c 3c
day
25 words or less ... 50c
Additional words ... 1c
FOUR-CAR POOL commuting to KC
daily 8-5, five days. Want 5th car. Call
Don House, Ar 4080 between 6:30 and
9 p.m.
19
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, promp. confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on business or conference duties. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
on the weekends. Summer. Call Miss Glesman at
National Bank for information and res-
ervations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
I
FOR RENT
GRADUATE STUDENT wants young
neer campus. Call 23498燥室. 25
BUSINESS SERVICE
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new semester with higher grades. Only computer books cost $3.50 per portable and standard machines. Student Union Book Store. 22
OREAD BARBERSHOP for expert barber service on the Hill. 8:00 to 5:30
Bathroom, Cleaning, The laundry and Dry Cleaning. Charley Coffman and Bernard Borst. 1273 Eddle. 20
TYIPING DONE promptly and accurately. Bring to Mrs. Merritt at 1409 Rhode Island, 2nd floor apartment, or call 2670J. 20
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop. 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
hanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Coeur, 888 La. Lap. 4. upstairs. Ph. 2757J.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604. 1109 Mass.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ments, including efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mals, home-made ples and sausages. Air-conditioned. Open from 6 am. midnight. Crystal Café. 609 Vt. ff
NOW
HIGH Adventure!
THE GREATNESS...
THE GLORY...
OF THE UNTAMED
NORTHWEST FRONTIER!
Board on the door
JAMES STEWART
ARTHUR KENNEDY
JULIA ADAMS
ROCK HUDSON
the Technicolor
BEND
OF THE
RIVER
LORI NELSON - JAY C. FLIPPEN - STEPIN' FECHT
Mat. 2:30 - Eve, 7 & 9 p.m.
Features: 3:03 - 7:20 - 9:24
ALSO
Cartoon – News
Granada
Granada
JAYAHWAKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop, including everything we are going one-stop pet shop, everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tf
COCKER PUPPIES. Registered. 10-
weeks old. Parti-colored. Weaned and
just right for training. Mrs. E. E. Alex-
ander. 345 Mississippi. Ph. 1183M. 21
1948 BUICK special sedan and 1949 Pontiac
111 Lindley, or phone Lawrence 852. 20
113 Lindley, or phone Lawrence 852. 20
FOR SALE
DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelican Graphos instruments are here. For drawing, tapping, and printing, let yours from your Student Selection available from Your Student Union Book Store. 22
ROYAL QUIET deluxe portable type-
tac Tack歼舔, 994, or see at 1505 Ohio. 22
Tack歼舷, 994, or see at 1505 Ohio. 22
Special rates to Students on subscriptions to TIME, LIFE, AND NEWSWEEK magazines. Order yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 22
Have your FOUNTAIN PEN REAPREDIRED
Students work repair work
Student Union Book Store.
New shipment of POCKET BOOKS just
these them at the Student Union Box
Store.
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
persons buyers. William J. V. Almen, 3110R.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOUND
A SLIDE RULE, during final week.
Owner may have by identifying and paying for this ad. Call Less Owen, phone 2916M. 20
HELP WANTED
BOY TO TB BUS dishes 12:30 to 1:30 for
toal and for extra parties. Phone:
847 457.
LOST
SILVER-MESH evening purse lost in vicinity of Community building, or in front of Watkins hall, Friday night. Reward. Call Virginia England at 900. 21
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1952
Acoustical Tile Put In KFKU Studio C
Studio C, will be the office headquarters of University radio announcers. The log for the federal communication will be kept in it.
Acoustical tile was installed this past weekend on the walls of studio C in KFKU.
It is situated so that the announcer can see studios A and B control room through three separate windows, each with three panels of glass.
All broadcasts coming from KFKU will be directed from Studio C.
Comfort Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
ALLED ARTISTS
presents
JANE MICHAEL
TOM O'SHEA
GINNY SIMMS • DRAKE • NIGH • O'Shea
Disc Jockey
RUSS MORGAN
TONY DORSEY
SARAH HERB
VAUGHAN JEFFRIES
On Our Stage
Comfort! Conventiones!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Starts Thursday
ALLUDI ARTISTS presents
MICHAEL
JANE
TOM O'SHEA
GINNY SIMMS DRAKE NIGH
Disc Jockey
PUZ MORGAN
TOMMY DORSEY
SARAH HEBB
VAUGHAN JEFFRIES
The conference, which is the 1952 Central Regional Conference of State Supervisors of Guidance Services and Counselor Trainers, is being held on the campus of Michigan State college.
Thursday Nite 8:45 ADELANE'S
Gordon Collister, guidance director and assistant professor of education, is attending a conference in East Lansing, Michigan, Monday through Wednesday.
The theme of the three-day conference is Counselor trainers and guidance supervisors take a look at their work. If will consist of lectures and discussions.
Gordon Collister Attends Conference
Editor Links Freedom To Care Given To Pets
Presents
VACATION:
Anywhere U.S.A.
Page 7
Spring and Summer Fashion Show Featuring Lovely Models From L.M.H.S. - K.U. And Lawrence's Prettiest Young Matrons
HE WAVED GOODBYE TO FREEDOM—Detective Frank Farrel phones for pie wagon while Detective Arthur Damick holds gun on Joseph Ricciardi in New York apartment. They saw Ricciardi, carrying a fur coat and a radio, leave the apartment. He saw them too, and, as a ruse, turned to wave goodbye to someone in the apartment. There was no one inside. The detectives said Ricciardi took furs, radio and jewelry from the apartment to the value of $1,000.
Cleveland, O. — (U.P.)— Capt. Will Jody, editor of Dog World Magazine, believes there is a direct connection between the degree of freedom in a nation and the care it gives its pets
I
University Daily Kansan
If You Grind Your Teeth,
They're Out Of Line
Chicago—(U.P). If you grind your teeth in your sleep the chances are they are out of line, according to Dr. Reuben Albion.
Albinson, advanced the theory at a meeting of the Chicago Dental society.
"It is argued that this is involuntary and therefore natural," Albinson said.
He contended that it is "an unconscious effort by the patient to relieve malarticulation that is irritating his mouth."
Albinson said the scientific term for teeth gringing is "bruxism."
particularly its dogs.
"The English-speaking people of the world have a deeper regard for dogs than any others, he said." To Tom Foley, an animal rights activist, For them, an animal is only a unit of production, and if he can't produce he's eliminated."
3 Staff Members Attend Bird Clinic
Dr. Rollin H. Baker, Dr. Fran Cross and Thane Robinson, graduate student from Kansas City, Kan all of the University Museum or Natural History staff, participate in a game bird clinic held west o Salina Sunday by the Kansas Association of Wild Life, inc.
Dr. Baker conducted a walking tour to illustrate important point about "cover" necessary for in creased quail population. Robinsons reported on a special study he is making on quail.
A Ton of Ore To Cost 30 Cent
The meeting, one in a series promoted by the Kansas association or wild life, was sponsored locally by the Central Kansas game and fish association.
Dr. Cross explained the long term study he is beginning on fish. He will set up a series of ponds to learn the various conditions and their relative importance that affect the numbers of fish.
Elizabeth City, N. C.—(U.P.)-National Lead Company plans t search the waters of Albemarle Sound, N.C., for ilmenite, an or containing titanium used in paints If the mineral is found, the first plans to mine it and will pay the state 30 cents a ton for the non-exclusive lease.
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYWAKER
NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHIPS
NOW— BURT
LANCASTER
'TEN TALL MEN'
Color by Technicolor
•
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Last Times Tonite
Zane Grey's
"MYSTERIOUS RIDER"
"LIGHT OF THE
WESTERN STARS"
WED. - THURS.
Martha Scott
Jeffrey Lynn
"STRANGE BARGAIN"
— and —
Kirk Douglas
Virginia Mayo
"ALONG THE
GREAT DIVIDE"
NOW • "DECISION BEFORE DAWN" • NOW
...THEY CAN'T ALL BE WRONG!
In Golden Words of Praise The Press Salutes "Bright Victory"!
The last time we quoted Walter Winchell it was on "Sands of Iwo Jima"—NOW-Read what he says about "BRIGHT VICTORY": Arthur Kennedy's performance struts every heart string."
"... If I have seen a better performance I can't recall when or by whom ... Really something to cheer about."—
N. Y. DAILY NEWS
"... Hollywood has every reason to be proud of itself."
“ . . . one of the year's finest . . . a superior motion picture experience.” N. Y. HERALD TRIBUNE
LIFE MAGAZINE (Movie of the Week)
STARTS FRIDAY
"... A rarity amongst motion pictures ... A thrilling, magnificent film." N. Y. MIRROR
(Mirror Movie of the Week)
NEW PATEE THEATRE
MANAGER'S NOTE: Arthur Kennedy was nominated for Academy Award!
Air Force Open For Applications
The Air Force is now accepting applications from college graduates and second-semester seniors for commissions and government-expense training as weather officers in the Air Weather service.
Applicants must have credit for one year of college physics and mathematics through integral calculus. Those accepted will be commissioned immediately in the Air Force reserve and ordered to active duty by mid-August 1952 to begin a 12-month meteorology course.
Training will be at one of seven United States colleges and universities offering the weather training course. They are the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, New York university, the University of California at Los Angeles, Pennsylvania State college, the University of Chicago, Florida State university and the University of Washington.
Graduates who are accepted and commissioned will attend the weather course as second lieutenants in a full pay status, including allowances for quarters and subsistence. During the initial tour after training, new weather officers will be assigned as forecasters in one of the 26 countries in which the Air Weather service maintains stations.
Weather Interested students who will graduate before August of this year should write to the Chief, Air Weather service, Andrews Air Force base, Washington 25, D. C. for application forms and detailed instructions.
Deane Malott's Father Dies
M. H. Malott, father of Deane W Malott, president of Cornell university and former KU chancellor, died yesterday in Abilene. He was 80 years old.
Mr. Malott, chairman of the board of the Citizens Bank of Abilene, was former treasurer of the American Bankers' association and a past president of the Kansas Bankers' Association. A few years ago he was elected to the Fifty Years club of the association.
Mr. Malott served 50 years as city treasurer, from 1899 to 1949.
One of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's sponsors to West Point, Mr Malott expressed the belief recently that the general "would make a real President."
President.
Besides his son, Mr. Malott leaves a sister, a grandson, two granddaughters, a nephew and a cousin.
Funeral services will be held at 3:30 today at St. John's Episcopal church in Abilene and burial will be in the Abilene cemetery.
Lab Theater Plays To Be Presented
In spite of production difficulties due to the illnesses of members of the cast and directors, the lab theater plays will be presented at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Friday in Green theater.
Eugene Walling, college junior, who is directing "Heavens," and Jo Anna March, college sophomore, who is acting in "Fame and the Poet," have both been absent from rehearsals because of the flu.
Direction of the three plays, including "At the Shrine," and the designing and building of scenery is being done by speech and drama students for classwork. This is one of the objectives of the laurel Thomas Shay, instructor of speech and director of the lab theater, said.
Drawing, Painting Course
Offered Faculty And Wives
A course in drawing and painting conducted by Harry Greaver, graduate student, is being offered for faculty members or their wives on Thursday evenings from 7 to 10 p.m.
The class is working with oil painting, water color, and live sketching. No credit is given for the course. Enrollment in the course is still open, and anyone interested should contact Harry Greaver at the Museum of Art.
Tuesday. Feb. 19, 1952
Page 8 University Daily Kansas
A house in the city is swaying on a rafterside. It has been pushed down by strong waves. The house is leaning precariously, with its roof torn off and walls collapsing. There are no signs of damage to the building itself.
CALIFORNIA YARD SLIDE AWAY—In South San Francisco, Calif. undermined by continued rains, the concrete floor and garage dropped away from the home of Robert Mayerson. The cave-in portion of the home slipped down a hillside. An avalanche of sand and debris was still washing down into the back yards of dozens of homes on this
street, near the Mayerson home, when this picture was taken.
Philharmonic Orchestra Plays For Near-Capacity Crowd
By MARILYN DUBACH
The Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra, conducted by Hans Schwieger, was appreciatively received Monday night by a near-capacity crowd in Hoch auditorium.
First on the program, the "Suite from the Water Music" by George Frederic Handel, featured a beautiful flute solo in the andante, with well-controlled strings throughout.
"Symphony in D Minor" by Cesar Franck, gave an impression of mysticism and a mood of unreality.
Well-played German waltz music, "Suite from Rosenkavalier" by Richard Strauss was of light operatic style. "Sorcerer's Apprentice" by Paul Dukas, was presented in a quick, light manner.
Dr. Schwieger said this generation of students is the most receptive audience yet. His students are aware they need to be good music than students, were 20 years ago.
"More effort should come from parents to teach their children the value of good music, or all the efforts of great artists will be in vain," the conductor said.
Dr. Schwieger said European
universities cannot be compared with those in the United States, because one may not attend a university in Europe until after having achieved a great knowledge of music from a conservatory of music.
Although European universities are much smaller than ours, they are on a basis of a much higher type of learning. Conductor Schwieger said. What we learn in universities is learned by European students in high school.
"I am surprised that more of the students don't take advantage of such a magnificent opportunity, one which presents one of the world's greatest orchestras and conductors," Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said.
"We are one of the few universities to have the chance to hear such an excellent orchestra," he said.
War-Bomb Excavations Give Clue To London's History
London—(U.P.)—Excavations in World War II's bomb-ravaged historic mile-square City of London has thrown up fresh archeological evidence of the ancient capital in Roman times.
The discoveries, results of excavations conducted by the London Roman and Medieval excavation council. amplify discoveries made in 1950.
It is calculated the fort was built late in the first century A.D., and was surrounded by a ditch which was still open in the mid-second century. The fort was dismantled and the ditch filled in at a date assumed to be not long after the year 200.
Sufficient excavations have been made in the Cripplegate area to prove the existence of a fort built to command roads north and west while the province was still being conquered by the Romans.
Dimensions and date of the fort have now been established. It covered an area of about 11 acres, with an east to west width of 230 yards and a north to south length of 250 yards.
Evidence was provided by coim found in the upper filling of the
The latest excavations show three sections of the outer ditch of the fort. Post holes for a bridge crossed the ditch at its southern end. An internal road and part of the gravel surface of a road from the north also were unearthed.
Experts conclude that the ditch and bridge on the south side are from the southern gate of the fort; the road from it points direct to Cripplegate.
ditch belonging to the late second to early third century. Pottery was found in the ditch itself.
The new discoveries indicate the fort was built some time before the Roman wall. Experts have placed the burning of the wall to be around 10 D.
At the southwest corner there was evidence of rebuilding and indications that a later inner wall was built to correspond with that of the fort.
News Roundup
37 Die As Snow Storm Hits NewEngland;Sailors In Peril
Boston, Mass.—(U.P.) At least 37 deaths were attributed to a gale-driven snow storm which left New England virtually paralyzed to-day. The weather bureau forecast more snow for tomorrow.
The savage northeaster, the worst storm to hit the six-state region on September 10, drove bearers stranded in shoulder-high snow drifts on Maine highways.
Mountainous waves pounded the coast from Maine to Connecticut and the fate of 50 missing seamen aboard twin tankers which broke up off Cape Cod still was in doubt. Two crewmen of the 10,000-ton Delaware tanker Pendleton were lost when the Coast Guard rescued 32 others from the broken hulk and five or six died in a leap from the tanker Fort Mercer.
French Approve Rearmed Germany
Paris—(U.P.)—The French National assembly put aside its fear of a rearmed Germany today and approved a program that would put 400,000 West Germans into uniform under Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.
The assembly thereby also voted its confidence in the month-old government of Premier Edgar Faure, who gambled the life of his cabinet to push the European army plan through the house.
The official vote was 327 to 287.
Soldiers On Leave Get Extra Service
Detroit—(U.F.)-The Army rolled out the red carpet today for the last contingent of 59 travel-weary recruits who chartered an airliner from Hawaii so they could spend what might be their last lufloughs at home before going to Korea.
The Army, criticized for sending inductees to Hawaii for basic training and then allowing them only the "stateside" seven-day furlough, piled the unshaven and wrinkled soldiers into Army buses for a big breakfast at Fort Wayne with their families and sweethearts.
US Plans To Test H-Bomb In Spring
Washington—(U.P.)-Highly qualified sources indicated today that the nation's first hydrogen bomb will be tested at Eniwetok atoll this spring.
There was no official confirmation. The atomic energy commission refused to go beyond its terse announcement Monday that preparations are now underway for a new series of test explosions at the Mid-Pacific proving grounds.
Leavenworth GOP Hears Governor
Leavenworth—(U.P.) —The times call for a man in the White House with advisers who have the trust and confidence of the majority of the people, Gov. Edward F. Arn believes.
Raking the Truman administration in a Lincoln day address to Leavenworth county Republicans, Monday night, the Governor said the nation "is in grave danger of domestic perils as well as international situations which threaten the freedom of our republic."
Mac Wants Out Of Primary Races
New York—(U.P.)—Gen. Douglas MacArthur asked election officials of Pennsylvania and Minnesota today to withdraw his name from their presidential primaries.
The General's office announced letters requesting that his name be eliminated had been mailed to the secretaries of state in both states.
American Sabere Jets Get Three Red MIG's
Eighth Army headquarters, Korea
— (U.P) — Heavily outnumbered
American Sabrejets shot down three
Communist MIG-15 fighter planes
today in battles ranging across "MIG Alley."
Two of the Russian-built jet fighters fell to earth in a snarling battle between 26 F-86 Sabrejets and 50 MIG's. The other kill was made in a high-altitude clash between 27 Sabres and 100 MIG's in the morning.
Agreement Reached On Peace Talks
Lawrence Man Named Managing Editor
The full armistice delegations agreed to recommend to their governments that talks begin within days of a cease-fire on the withdrawal of foreign troops from Korea, "peaceful settlement of the Korean question, and so forth."
Panmunjom, Korea—(U.P.)—Truce negotiators agreed today on a recommendation for a Korean peace conference, but split further over Russia's eligibility to police an armistice.
Topeka — (U.P.) — Tom Ladwig, Lawrence, former Midwest business representative of the Newspaper Enterprise association, was named managing editor of the Kansas Government Journal today.
Ladwig replaces James G. Welch who recently resigned to join the Kansas Press association.
The announcement of Ladwig's appointment was made by John G. Stutz, executive director of the League of Kansas Municipalities.
Secretary Of State Visits New Queen
London —(U.P.)— Queen Elizabeth II received Secretary of State Dean Acheson in a 15-minute audience today in the drawing room of Clarence house, her residence.
3
She also held separate audiences with French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman and west German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden introduced each of the leaders and joined in the conversations.
Washington—(U,P)—The state department loyalty and security board today cleared veteran diplomat John Carter Vincent of charges that he was a Communist.
Diplomat Cleared Of Red Charges
The department announced that Vincent was "completely cleared by the department of charges involving his loyalty to the United States and his security as a government employee."
Grain Investigation Hearing Continues
7
Dodge City —(U.P.) Wayne S. Marteney, 40-year-old general manager of the Garden Grain and Seed company of Garden City, remained today in the spotlight as the bankruptty hearing continued in the fabulous rise and fall of the corporation.
Testifying he used 60 thousand dollars of his own money to try to save the corporation, Marteney said that none of the missing grain corporation funds went to him personally.
Chicago Architect Is AIA Guest Lecturer
Richard M. Bennet, distinguished Chicago architect, was a two-day guest lecturer of the American Institute of Architects this week.
Student conferences were held Monday. A staff dinner in the Faculty club Monday night concluded the lecture series.
Kansas State Historical Society
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- Phog Gets 700th Win As Jayhawks Beat Aggies
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Daily Kansan
49th Year, No. 93 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1952
Tony Pastor To Play For All-Student Dance
Tony Pastor and his orchestra will play for an all-student dance, sponsored by the junior and senior classes, at 9 p.m. Saturday, March 8, in Hoch auditorium.
A queen will be chosen to reign at the prom. Every organized women's house may select one candidate from each class. North College and Corbin may each select 12 candidates. Any individual may also enter a candidate.
A picture of each candidate must be taken to the Alumni office by 5 p.m. Thursday. On the back of each picture should be the candidate's name, address and class.
Bandleader Pastor has been asked to judge the candidates from the pictures that will be submitted. If this is done, he will choose one girl from each class. The queen will then be chosen by those attending the dance, using their tickets to vote for one of the two candidates.
The queen will be announced at the intermission.
Tickets for the dance are $3 a couple. Spectator tickets are 75 cents apiece. ___
Drama Group Initiates Nine
Nine persons were initiated into the University Players, campus dramatic organization, Tuesday.
The new Players are William-Sollner, assistant instructor in English; Gerhard Herm, special student; Joan Ketterman, education junior; Shirley Strain and Eugene Walling, college juniors; Gary Lehman, college sophomore; Dee Price, fine arts freshman, and Bill Thompson and Jerry Scott, college freshmen.
The three-fold purpose of the University Players is to offer opportunities for students to take part in dramatics, to have social activities for its members, and to provide entertainment of good quality for the community.
Candidates earn active membership in the organization by accumulating a minimum of 10 points in a graded-scale point system for doing acting, directing, playwriting, stagecraft, make-up, properties or ushering for campus plays. There are now 39 active members.
Present officers are Leola Stewart, president; James Claussen, vicepresident, and Kay Peters, secretary-treasurer. Election of next year's officers will be held April 8.
Folk Songs Selected For Carillon Program
Four French-Canadian folk songs have been selected for today's carillon program at 7 p.m.
They are "A La Claire Fontaine," "Les Trois Filles D'un Prince," "Un Canadien Errant" and "Le Canard Blanc."
Other numbers on the program include:
"Prelude in D Minor" by Nees, "Lullaby" by Brahms, "Minuet" by Rayck and "Dance and Dream Pantomime" from Hansel and Gretel by Humperdinck.
--san photo by Jim Murray.
A. E. B. H.
TONY PASTOR
Six Students To Compete In Speech Final
Six students selected from preliminaries of the annual Lorraine Buehler Oratorical contest will compete in the finals beginning at 8 p.m. Thursday in Strong auditorium.
The students in order of presentation and their topics are as follows: Don Dirks, college junior—"Blueprint for Survival," a speech on America's responsibility in a chaotic world; Sue Moyer, college freshman—"The You in the USA," a speech primarily on assuming the responsibilities of citizenship.
Wilbur Goodseal, education junior—"Second Class Citizenship—A Challenge," an appeal for the removal of race discriminations; William Van Almelen, business junior—"Man of the Century," a eulogy of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Wish Koerper, college senior—"Fish a Little Longer," a speech on finding time in a busy world to do the truly worthwhile things, and Dick Sheldon, college sophomore—"The Great River," a speech on the dangers of mediocrity in terms of mass psychology.
Judges for the contest will be Allen Crafton, professor of speech; Dean F. J. Moreau of the law school; R. M. Davis, professor of law, and Kim Giffin, Don Dixon, and Richard Schieflebusch, all assistant professors of speech.
Kent Shearer, first year law student, will be master of ceremonies. Shearer won the contest last year and it is traditional for the previous winner to be master of ceremonies for the contest.
E.-C. Buehler, professor of speech,
will award the prizes at the end of
the program. First prize will be
a complete set of Encyclopedia Amer-
icana. Second prize is $20 and third
prize is $10.
Weather: Generally fair 'tonight
lows tonight 10-20 northwest half
20-25 southeast half. Highs Thursday
in 50's.
Magic Number' Puts Dr. Allen More Than 100 Wins Ahead Of His Contemporaries
By JOHN HERRINGTON
A thunderous ovation still rang today in the ears of veteran basket- ball coach Forrest C. Phog Allen whose Kansas Jayhawkers racked up the 700th victory of his 42-year career last night.
All the basketball world felt the number 700 coming up. Word first started when the Jayhawkers were preparing for Nebraska and Allen had number 698.
After Kansas came through with their 90-52 win over the Cornhuskers, the magic number hung like an omen. The 3,500 fans in Hoch auditorium last night realized it. And when the number finally came up, pandemonium broke loose.
Amid the cheering throng of wellwishers who crowded around him, Allen put on what was probably the biggest smile of his 42-year career.
After flashbulbs had stopped popping and crowds had stopped yelling around him the dean of American cage coaches could sit back and realize his accomplishment.
And while the victory over the Oklahoma Aggies was a sweet one for the 66-year old coach, the personal victory Allen had scored didn't enter into his mind.
His 700 victories-record stands out as a target for other basketball coaches to shoot at. Not one of Alen's contemporaries has yet cleared the 600-mark.
"That 700th win didn't enter as a celebration of personal triumph," Dr. Allen said. "I was thinking of the boys and how badly they wanted to beat those Aggies.
"We should have beaten them down there. We really wanted that win"
As for the game itself, there was never any doubt about the outcome. The Jayhawkers jumped to an early lead and lengthened it all the wav.
Today Dr. Allen plans to retire when he is 70 years old. The reason is simply that the University does not provide for retirement until the 70th year.
The question of Dr. Allen's retirement always seems to crop up about the end of the basketball season or when another record is set by a Kansas team.
He has been coaching continuously at the University since 1920. He won the College's three NCAA championships in 1907 and 1989, winning the Missouri Valley championship both years.
In his 41 complete years of coaching, the doctor has gathered 28 championships. In 45 team years—with four games remaining in the 1952 season—he has won 700 games and lost 202 for a .776 percentage.
In his 35 years at Kansas, he has won 520 games and lost 188.
"The boys are in good physical and mental frame to take them as they come," Dr. Allen says. And Missouri comes first.
But the Aggie victory and the 700th win are past. The next natural question would be, "Will we beat Kansas State?"
Dr. Cliver Kamm, research consultant in Detroit, will speak to the University section of the American Chemical society at 7:30 p.m. today in Bailey hall.
Kamm To Address Chemical Society
"One Hundred Years of Research Work on Cholesterol and Related Sterols," will be Dr. Kamm's topic.
Dr. Kamm wrote the first text-book on qualitative chemistry and thus established it as a required part of chemistry education.
He has been a teacher at the Universities of Michigan and Illinois. He organized the research department of Parke-Davis company in Detroit, the first separate research department in the United States.
During World War I, while a student at the University of Illinois, he became one of the leading chemists in the United States who established the fool-proof methods of organic syntheses.
CORNELL
THE VANQUISHED AND THE VICTOR—Coach Henry Iba of Oklahoma A&M offers his congratulations to Dr. Forrest C. Phog Allen after the Kansas Jayhawks registered a convincing 66-46 victory of the Cowpokes last night. The triumph was the 700th basketball victory in Allen's 42-year coaching career—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Journalism Historical Items To Be Given At Dedication
Several important parts of Kansas journalism history will be presented formally to the University Friday morning when dedication ceremonies are held for the new building of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Governor Edward F. Arn and many Kansas editors who were close friends and proteges of the great Emporia editor will be present in the William Allen White Memorial Reading room in the structure which
34
NICE TRY — Larry Davenport, Kansas freshman ace, goes up in the air in an unsuccessful attempt to block a shot by Chester Reams of Oklahoma A&M in Jayhawkers' 66-48 triumph last night—Kan-
has just been recently remodeled at a cost of $300,000. Dean Burton W. Marvin of the school will preside.
The school will receive an oil portrait that shows Mr. White at his desk at the Emporia Gazette. It is the work of Joseph Hirsch, leading portrait painter of New York: The donor is Harry Scherman of New York, president of the Book-of-the-Month club and for many years a business associate of Mr. White.
Definite word has not yet been received from William L. White, well-known author and son of W. A. White, whether he will be here to present some moments. These will be articles and letters of his father dealing with KU and Kansas journalism.
George Matthew Adams, columnist and head of the George Matthew Adams newspaper syndicate in New York, will be present to present his collection of first editions of William Allen White's books and many other books and pamphlets on journalism.
Another gift is the Albert T. Reid collection of famous cartoons, Reid, a former Leavenworth and Topeka publisher and leading cartoonist in New York for many years, may be present to make the presentation. It consists of at least one original autographed cartoon from nearly every prominent cartoonist in the past half century.
Ferd Voiland, the state printer, is giving KU a 100-year-old Washington hand press, which until recently was used in the state printing plant for making proofs of books. This model, which was probably the finest and most widely used of all hand printing presses, was developed in 1827.
These items, with others already in the school's possession, will be the foundation of what is hoped to become one of the nation's leading collections of the history of journalism.
Abraham Funeral Thursday
Funeral services for Raymond C. Abraham, superintendent of the University postal station, will be 3:30 p.m. Thursday at the Schubert chapel, 1020 New Hampshire. Mr. Abraham died Monday of a heart attack.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1952
ASC Representatives To Vote On Changes
Thursday night at the meeting of the All Student Council, there will be attempts made to "bring this reorganization business to a head," according to James Logan, ASC president.
Student representatives will be asked at that time to vote one way or another. Either they will favor one of the proposed reorganization plans, or they will favor retaining the plan of student representation for the Council found in the present constitution of ASC.
Yet, when the votes are being cast on the issue, whose opinion will be shown, the representative's, or the opinion of the college groups they represent?
We say that the opinion will be in most cases that of the representative alone. The plain facts are that KU students hardly know anything about the various plans of reorganization; yet they are the very people the plan concerns. Here is a brief presentation of reorganization plans.
Plans for reorganization of student government have been in the development stages for several months. They originated when leaders of the Pachacamac and FACTS political parties got together for the purpose of rendering impossible a continuation of the Greek-Independent political split.
The original reorganization proposal, plan I, was presented to the ASC. It provided for redistributing the units of representation. It would replace the old system based on schools in the University with one based on types of residence. Eight new residence-districts would be set up, as follows:
I. Social fraternities
I. Social trustiness
II. Social sororities
II. Social sororities
III. Men's University houses
IV. Women's University houses
V. Cooperative houses
VI. Professional fraternities
VII. Freshman dormitories
VIII Unaffiliated students
The Council would have a membership of 20. Representatives would be apportioned among the districts in proportion to their population, except that no one district would have over one-fourth of the membership. This exception limits the largest group, un-affiliated students, to five representatives instead of the 10 which they would otherwise have. It was included to prevent any one district from dominating the Council.
The five representatives denied to the unaffiliated are apportioned among the other districts according to population. Thus, District I will have five representatives; II, three, III, and IV, two, each, V, VI, and VII, one each; and VIII, five.
A compromise proposal also was presented which was a compromise between reorganization plan I, and the plan in the constitution. This proposal calls for similar redistricting, but would allow representation on the basis of voter participation rather than population.
With this plan, the number on the Council would vary depending on the number who vote, one representative being allowed for every 200 voters. Each district is guaranteed one representative, and the unaffiliated are divided into two or three geographical districts.
There it is. Whether or not either new plan will be adopted will be up to representatives tomorrow night. But the results of the meeting will affect every student.
If any student has questions or opinions on the reorganization schemes, we suggest he get in contact with his Council representative before the meeting, and make his opinions known.
-Bob Stewart.
BUS
STOP
917-X
Krighton
"Can I give you a lift somewhere? It's right on my way!"
The Hastings Collegian, Hastings college (Neb.), asked some of the coeds what they consider to be an ideal date. Some of the answers:
Comments
What's A Perfect Date?...
"The ideal date doesn't have to be good looking or have a lot of money to rate high with me. I think that it is loads of fun to sit home and pop corn or listen to records. I think that this certain fellow should by all means be friendly to both young people and old. . Consideration and good manners are also important."
“. Someone you can be at ease with and not be afraid of his taking your actions wrong.”
"... One who is a good mixer, a good dancer, a good looker and preferably a good athlete."
“. . I like the fellow who has big ideas about what he wants to do in life and works hard to reach those goals. I like a fellow to be changeable, that is to say, one who switches from one mood to another.”
“. . One who can make you have a good time and at the same time show you he is having fun. Good looks, money and reputation do not necessarily make a fellow a perfect date.”
Communist Humor
The Wampus, University of Southern California humor magazine, has sent a challenge to the Moscow office of Krokodil, reportedly the only humor magazine in the Soviet Union. The challenge read: "Our stock anti-Truman jokes running low. Hear you have inexhaustible sumply.
Our supply anti-Stalin jokes limitless. Suggest exchange and publication. Will run all your anti-Truman jokes verbatim for all our anti-Stalin stories you use verbatim."
The editor has received no reply as yet.
Here Is Something All Can Do For Brotherhood Week
Editor's Note: As part of Brotherhood week the Daily Kansan today presents a guest article by James Kerney Jr., editor of the Trenton, N.J. Times and a member of the National Brotherhood week committee.)
Pick any American along the street and ask him, "Do you hate the people you work with, shop with, live with?"
His quick answer will be, "Don't be silly. Of course not. I get along fine with everybody."
That's part of the American tradition. We get along fine with everybody. The counterman in the grocery, the waitress in the restaurant, the fellow at the next bench or desk, as well as the man across the street and his wife and children, they're all alike to us. They're all neighbors.
The idea of getting along with people is an old American custom. Nevertheless, one week out of the year we announce publicly that we don't care what a man's creed, color or national origin is; he's our neighbor. That's Brotherhood week.
In the face of this, somebody is bound to ask, "Why have Brotherhood week? It's what we do all the year."
"Well, it doesn't hurt to remind ourselves that this is a great country. It suits us fine. We live in it and love it. Of course, we'd like the rest of the world to feel peaceable toward us, but until the happy day we'll do our best to keep the peace here and among our friends abroad.
In the meanwhile, most of us feel there isn't much we can do to change the world. It's a little too big for any of us to handle by ourselves. The average fellow says, "That's a job for the big shots. I'll tend to my own business." But the peace of the world is part of our business today, even if most of us don't know what we can do about it.
This year the National Conference of Christians and Jews has come up with a happy suggestion. You can pledge a pint of your blood in Brotherhood week. There isn't a better way for Americans to show they mean brotherhood as a working idea. Give a pint of your blood for your neighbor who might need it or for someone caught in a disaster.
Never mind his color or his religion, if he needs your blood to live. Or give your blood for a soldier in Korea. He may be one of our American boys, or he may be a Turk or a Greek, a Canadian or a Britisher. Whoever he is, he needs blood because he's been fighting so that there can be peace in the world.
--protege, Alan Bible, in Nevada.
Interpretive Articles
Key Senate Seats At Stake In '52 Election
But the Republicans will encounter trouble also. If Eisenhower wins the nomination for president, Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts will ride back to office with him. Otherwise Lodge may find it difficult to keep his seat. Missouri's James Kem may have real trouble on his hands. At the moment he faces only Missouri Attorney General Taylor, but should Truman decide not to run for president, Kem will find that he is up against a Truman clique. Also, George Malone will have a stiff fight against Pat McCarran's
Many soft spots in the Democratic party are beeyed by Republicans. Blair Moody, Democratic successor to Michigan's Arthur H. Vandenberg certainly will have trouble carrying Republican Michigan. Sen. William Benton is in trouble because he has neglected the home fires back in Connecticut. Maryland's Herbert R. O'Connor has decided not to run for re-election. Mike DiSalle undoubtedly will have trouble unseating John W. Bricker in Ohio. Tom Connally, Senate majority leader, will have a tough battle with Texas Att. Gen. Price Daniel and Martin Dies.
"There are going to be some changes made around here" may well be the political slogan for this year. While we may or may not get a new president, we are certain to get some new senators. Because this is the presidential election year, many people are prone to forget some of the important senatorial races.
However, for the Republicans to gain control of the Senate they not only must fill the 20 seats being vacated by party members, but they must capture three seats from the Democrats. Republicans have little hope of obtaining five of these 14 seats—all five are in the "Solid South." At the present time the Democrats hold 50 seats to 46 for the Republicans.
Senatorial races this year can and may be as important as the presidential election. There are 34 Senate seats to be filled. Of these, 20 now are held by Republicans, with the remaining 14 held by Democrats. It is easy to see how there could be interesting results. If a Republican is elected president he may find he has a Democratic Senate. Likewise, a Democratic president may be faced with a Republican Senate.
It appears that Sen. Joe McCarthy will be back for another six years. Wisconsin Gov. Walter Kohler seems afraid to run against McCarthy, even though Kohler has been promised excellent campaign resources.
The election this year can be of grave importance to the United States for years to come. Undoubtedly there will be a change in the presidency and possibly a change in Senate majority. Actually, the Republicans may get a party president, but they probably will not get a Senate majority at this time. However, 1954 will offer the Republicans their best chance to gain Senate control. Then, they will have only 10 seats at stake, while the Democrats will have 22 to defend.
—Maurice Prather.
Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn.
Inland Daily Press Assn., Associated Collegiate Press, and Intercollegiate Press Assn., Represented by the National Advertiser Service 430 Medford.
EDITORIAL STAFF
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Editorial Assistants Anne Snider Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor Ellsworth Zahn
Assistant Managing Editors Helen Lau Fry, Ben Halman
Joe Lastelic, Jim Powers
City Editor Jeanne Lambert
Assistant Editor Editors Jeanne Fitzgerald, Hill Newman,
Jerry Renner, Katrina Swart
Telegraph Editor Charles Burch
Assistant Telegraph Editor Max Thompson
Society Editor Diane Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors Lorena Barlow, Pauline Patterson
Sports Editor Julee Jones
News Advisor Victor J. Danley
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
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September 17, 1970 at Lawrence, Kau, Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
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Adventures In Music Land' Teaches Grade School Pupils Musical History
Aladdin had his magic lamp and it took him many places, but he has nothing on students in classrooms in the Lawrence-Topeka-Kansas City area by a mere press of the thumb on a magic stick, a weird, modern, musical voice takes them anywhere in history they may want to go.
The journey begins in the KFKU studios on the "Adventures in Music Land" program. Miss Mildred Seaman, program director, and Lynn Osborn, college senior, set the scene
NY City Opera Co. Plans New Operas
New York—U.P.)-The New York City Opera company is putting on three interesting new productions during its spring season starting at the City Center on March 20 and running six weeks through April 27.
Dimitri Mitropoulos conducted a concert version of this contemporary work with the New York Philharmonic Symphony this season but the opera as such has not been performed in this country since Leoold Stokowski presented it in Philadelphia in 1930.
The one likely to attract most attention is Alban Berg's "Wozzeck" on April 3.
The second new production will be Gian-Carlo Menotti's "Ahmal and the Night Visitors," composed for television and presented by NBC last Christmas Eve.
The third novelty will be Kurt Weill's "The Beggars' Opera," in a new translation and adaptation by Marc Blitzstein, which puts the locale in New York in 1870. The original Weill music remains unchanged.
by telling the students where they are going, what they will see, and whom they will visit.
This musical voice, arranged and played by University students, introduces grade school students to such famous composers as Bach, Mendelssohn, Beethoven, Schubert, Chopin, and Mozart.
At 2:30 p.m. Thursday the program will go back to the first Bayreuth festival to visit Wagner. The festival, given every August, is a mecca for music lovers.
Miss Seaman presses the magic stick and its musical voice takes her and Osborn and the students back into musical history.
The magic stick has two voices, one that everyone can hear and one that only Miss Seaman and Osborn hear.
Marcus Hahn, instructor in music education, selected the University students who play this magic music. They are Neill Humfeld, graduate student, trombone; Robert Stewart, fine arts senior, cello; Phyllis Glass, education senior, bassoon; Frank Vacin and Larry Havlicke, fine arts sophomores, clarinet; Dorsey Evans, fine arts junior, Don Macauley, fine arts freshman and Ray Glover, education junior, trumpet; Paul Worley, college sophomore, percussion.
Melvin Zack, graduate student, arranged background music for the program.
Mr. Washington Liked His Tea
Washington — (U.P.) The first prominent distiller in America was an habitual tea drinker.
The information came from the library of congress and from George Stimpson, who knows something about everything.
Stimpson maintains that Americans became drinkers of coffee instead of tea after the pioneers got angry and pitched a lot of tea-balls into Boston harbor. Seems the forefathers didn't want to pay taxes on the tea.
He was George Washington.
There is no doubt that Washington was the first well-known distiller in this country.
In fact, distilling operations still are going on in the original "Washington tract" in Fairfax County.
"He drank it day and night."
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The files show that Washington liked his tea. One biographer says,
Ripley, Tenn.—(U.F.)—A baby born to Mrs. John W. Davis has a 36-year-old grandmother and a 52-year-old great - grandmother. The baby's mother is 15.
Through Car Service to DENVER SALT LAKE CITY AND PACIFIC COAST
The first president, incidentally,
mentioned coffee only a couple of
times in his voluminous diary. He
once wrote at Mount Vernon: "Sent my boat to Alexandria for molasses and coffee." Another time he mentioned "The Coffee room" at Savannah and the "Coffee house" at Annapolis.
ON THE Steamliner "CITY OF ST. LOUIS" AND PONY EXPRESS
With these two trains you have a choice of departure times. You also have a choice of Pullman space or reclining Coach seat, and delicious dining car meals; on either train. The "City of St. Louis" Coach seats are reserved.
STREAMLINER
"CITY OF ST. LOUIS" PONY EXPRESS
SCHEDU
See your Local Agent for regular and conditional steps not shown in schedule above.
CITY OF ST. LOUIS PONY EXPRESS
Lv. Kansas City 9:30 pm (CST) 11:30 pm
Lv. Lawrence 10:09 pm ** 12:30 am
Lv. Topeka 10:37 pm 1:15 am
Lv. Manhattan 11:27 pm 2:20 am
Lv. Junction City 11:55 pm 3:15 am
Lv. Salina 12:45 am 4:50 am
Lv. Hays 2:24 am 7:08 am
Lv. Ellis 1:58 am (MST) 7:30 am
Lv. Oakley 3:08 am 9:20 am
Lv. Sharon Springs 3:58 am 10:35 am
Ar. Denver 7:45 am 3:30 am
Ar. Salt Lake City 9:20 pm 8:00 am
Ar. Los Angeles 3:00 pm (PST) 7:00 am
Ar. San Francisco 2:20 pm 7:35 am
Ar. Portland 3:30 pm 6:00 am
Ar. Seattle 9:15 pm 11:59 am
- Stops for paying passengers to Denver or beyond.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1952
P
WOMEN'S I-M CHAMPS—Foster hall won the women's intramural basketball championship from Delta Delta Delta 53 to 50 last night. Front row (left to right) are Virginia Brooks, Ernestine Dehlinger, Shirley Mickelson. Top row, Darlene DeMerritt, Marlene Peterson, Asie Gibson and Jillian Run—Kansas photo by Jim Murray.
Anita Philipp and Jappy Rau.-Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Foster Hall Wins Title In Women's Basketball
The women's intramural basketball championship went to Foster hall Tuesday evening, as they defeated Delta Delta Delta, 53-50, in an action-packed contest. $ \textcircled{4} $
The high-scoring Foster six have won seven consecutive games with an average of over 50 points each.
Foster opened the scoring with two quick set-shots by Shirley Mickelson, after Marlene Peterson had cleared the defensive boards. Virginia Brooks, Foster guard, but Bears linebacker was gone in the game the sophomore forward hit the free throw for the first of her 38 points.
In women's basketball, the guards are not allowed to shoot. When a guard is fouled, one of her teammates must take the shot. Pat Garret picked up her first foul as she charged into Brooks and Mickelson made the shot good to give Foster a 5-2 lead.
On the next play, Anita Philipp scored for Foster and Garrett came back with a long shot for the Tri-Delts.
At the end of the first quarter, Foster led 11-9 and they stretched it to 27-20 at the half. In the second quarter Mickelson poured in eight points for Foster and Phillip scored six, and Ernestine Dehlig had six.
The Foster guards were unable to hold down Garrett and she tallied nine points in that period for Tri-Delt while Chloe Warner scored four and Shirley Wilkie two.
Defensive play of both teams tightened after the half. Jappy Rau and Marlene Peterson took several defensive rebounds, while some accurate passing by Brooks gave Foster a number of good shots.
The Tri-Delt defense saw Joan Carter, Sue Quinn, Mary Loveless and Grace Endacott alternate in
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positions. Loveless and Endacott intercepted several bad passes by Foster forwards.
In the third quarter, the scoring was even. The Tri-Delts sunk 14 and Foster 16. Dehlinger and Philipp each had eight for Foster while Garrett scored nine for the opposition in the third period.
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The last quarter was the highest in scores, with Garrett hitting 13 and Phillip eight. Brooks and Mickelson sufled out of the Foster lineup in the final stanza and the Tri-Delts pulled within three points.
For the Tri-Delts, Garrett scored 38; Warner, 10; Wilkie, 2. Anita Philliph hit 28 for Foster, Dehlinger scored 13, and Mickelson had 12.
Long Live The 'King'
Peabody, Mass.—(U.P.)A private cemetery here, in use by one family for generations, contains more than 200 graves, each with the headstone of an individual named "King."
Round-Up
HILL CHAMPIONSHIP
Tonight
Division A
8:15 p.m.
Beta Theta Pi - Dark Horses
7 p.m.
Beta Theta Pi - AFROTC
9:15 p.m.
Varsity House - Phi Gamma Delta
Cage World Salutes Dr. Allen
New York—(U.P.)-The basketball world today saluted the game's winningest coach, Dr. Forrest Phog Allen of Kansas, on the occasion of the 700th victory of his career.
The milestone triumph for the 66-year-old Allen, now in his 42nd year as a coach, came last night at Lawrence, Kan., when his current Kansas team, ranked no. 7 in the nation, walloped the tough Oklahoma Aggies by an impressive 66 to 46 score.
The loquacious Allen, who often has been the center of bitter controversy during his long career as he advocated many changes in the rules and method of the game, has been guiding Kansas U. teams for 35 years, dividing the other seven years between Baker U., Haskell Institute, and Central Missouri, playing 902 games. In that time, starting in 1908 with two years off, 1910-12, to practice as an osteopathic surgeon, Allen has coached teams to 21 conference championships.
Last night's win was perhaps the high spot to date of the current season for the Jayhawks, avenging an earlier four-point loss on the Aggies' home court.
St. Bonaventure, which yesterday accepted a bid to the National Invitation Tournament along with St. John's and Duquesne, closed out its home season with an impressive 69-44 victory over Sienna.
Texas Christian ran its league-leading record in the Southwest Conference to 8-1 by trouncing the Texas Aggies, 58-44. TCU now must beat only Baylor on Saturday to clinch at least a tie for the loop title.
Louisville ran its record to 19-4 by whipping North Carolina State, ranked no. 18 nationally, 82-67.
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American Skiers Drop Out In Race At Olympics
Oslo, Norway — (U,P) — United States skiers withdrew from the 50-kilometer cross-country race in the Olympic winter games today because of an unfavorable snow condition and a lack of experience for the gruelling 30-mile marathon.
Hjalmar Hvam of Portland, Ore., manager of the U.S. long distance ski squad, explained that expected fog and melting snow would handicap inexperienced Americans.
Hvam said the decision to withdraw the four U.S. entries was made at the advice of the team doctor.
"They are perfectly healthy," Hvam said. "But for a 50-kilometer grind under difficult snow conditions they would need a lot more conditioning."
The four U.S. skiers tentatively scheduled to compete in the race were Wendell Broomhall of Rumford, Me., George Hovland of Duluth, Minn., John Caldwell of Putney, Vt., and John Burton Burton of Wyzata, Minn.
"Actually, we never were officially entered over here." Hvam said. "Although we did file entries from the United States, we did not sign official entries over here because we doubted whether our skiers would reach proper condition."
A forecast of a warm air stream was expected to produce fog on the higher portions of the Holmenkollen course. Officials feared that the colored cloth markers might not be seen by all contestants. Melting snow also was expected to create a waxing problem for most of the late starters in the race.
Hvam said that by withdrawing from the 50-kilometer race, American skiers would be saved for the four-by-10-kilometer cross-country relay race on Saturday.
A field of 37 skiers started on the long distance grind at one-minute intervals.
---
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Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Phog Allen Wins 700th Game As KU Tops A&M
Phog Allen Wins 7 KU Defense Stops A&M In 66-46 Jayhawk Win
The Kansas Jayhawkers gave Coach F. C. Phog Allen his 700th win Tuesday evening as they trounced Oklahoma A&M with an impressive 66 to 46 victory.
The Kansans played an inspired brand of basketball in winning from the nation's top defensive team. They were not only aggressive on offense, but continuously stole the ball and intercepted passes.
Clyde Lovellette and Bob Kenney both went over the twenty point mark as Coach Allen's crew established a new scoring record against the Aggies.
Lovellette sank 27 points and Kenney netted 23. This gives the All-American center a total of 521 points this season. Kenney maintained his high free throw percentage with nine out of ten attempts.
The Kansas defense held the Aggies scoreless for five minutes of the first quarter before Bob Mattick connected with a goal from the field.
Kansas was never behind in the contest. Lovelette sank a shot with only thirty seconds gone in the game, and from there KU set a torrid scoring pace. At the end of the first quarter the score stood at 22 to 10.
The Kansas drive continued into the second stanza, with the Jayhawkers piling up a 19 point spread between the teams. Johnson and Stockton of the Aggies cut the lead to 11 points, but the scoring drive was started and the A&M squad could not halt it.
At the close of the third period, Kansas was leading 53 to 37, and in the last quarter KU went on another scoring drive netting a 25-point spread between the teams before the Aggies were able to cut it down.
Kansas scored on twenty-three of sixty-six shots for a 41 per cent average. The Aggies were able to tally on only eighteen of sixty-one for 30 per cent.
In rebounding, the Kansas squad was far superior. Bill Hollougand was
eredited with clearing the defensive boards six times, and Lovellette came up with the same number.
This was the eighteenth win for Kansas against two losses, one of them being to the Aggies earlier in the season.
Lovellette's 27 points against A&M was his high for a meeting between these schools. Previously he had been held to 18 points or less. The individual scoring high in the series is 28 points held by Bob Kurland.
Box Score
Okla. A&M (46) G FT F
Johnson 7 3 0
Stockton 5 3 1
Ward 1 1 4
Darcey 1 1 4
Mattick 3 1 4
Nims 0 0 2
Reams 1 0 0
Roark 0 1 2
Sheets 0 0 5
Totals 18 10 22
Kansas (66) G FT F
Davenport 0 1 0
Kenney 7 9 3
Keller 1 2 3
Lovelette 11 5 3
Born 0 0 1
Heitholt 0 0 1
Hoag 2 0 3
Hougland 2 2 5
Kelley 0 1 4
Totals ... 23 20 23
Okla, A&M 10 15 12 9-46
Kansas 12 16 15 13-66
Free Thows Missed—Okla. A&M: Stockton, Darcey, Mattick, Kansas: Kenney, Lovellette 5, Hoag 2.
Officials: Jim Enright and Mike Oberhelman.
Brooklyn Dodgers In Training Camp Sorrowfully Wait For 'Next Year'
Vero Beach, Fla. - (U.P.)- The Brooklyn Dodgers ended their sorrowful wait for "next year" today and opened their 1952 spring training camp.
Manager Charley Dressen's first step in a program to make up for the Dodgers' pennant failure of 1951 was to order sluggers Gil Hodges and Carl Furillo to learn to hit to right field. Both men slumped badly in the stretch drive as the Giants came on to win.
"I want to break that left field shift against them," Dressen explained. "They'll be better hitters if
they learn to slice to right field."
Hodges blasted 40 home runs and knocked in 103 runs last season but he batted only .268. Furillo hit 16 home runs and knocked in 91 runs although he served as leadoff man most of the season. He batted .255.
Dressen also revealed that he would experiment with Furillo lower down in the batting order "where his power might help us more." He indicated that Peewee Reese would be restored the leadoff position he occupied under Burt Shotton and that Billy Cox would be the leading candidate to succeed Reese in the no. 2 position.
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Basketball Title To Teams Today
Open Til Midnight!
The Hill championship in men's intramural basketball will be decided tonight in Robinson annex when the fraternity and independent tournament winners meet for the title.
An overflow crowd is expected to witness the contests which will see Beta Theta Pi play the Dark Horses for the title in division A.
The Beta's "B" squad will meet the independent AFROTC team in division B and in the C division, Phi Gamma Delta will meet Varsity House.
In the "B" bracket, the Betas have defeated Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Delta Theta and Kappa Sigma. The AFROTC squad defeated Varsity House and Roger Williams.
The Beta "A" team gained the championship bracket with wins over Sigma Chi, Phi Delts and Delta Upsilon besides their regular season games.
The Phi Gamma squad defeated Lambda Chi and Phi Delta Theta in the "C" bracket and Varsity House automatically won their position.
The Dark Horse "A" squad includes: Odd Williams, Frank Holfelter, Pat Murphy, Bud Laughin, George Kennard and Tom Kennedy,
Members of the Beta “A” squad includes: Jerry Brownlee, Hai Cleavinger, Mark Rivard, William Altman, Riley Woodson, Ralph Moon, James Floyd, Robert Reed and Ned Wilson.
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Bratton To Fight Without Any Pay
Chicago — (U.P.) — Johnny Bratton fights for tonight, but the Negro battler figured a shot at Kid Gavilan's world walterweight championship might warrant a free show.
Bratton, twice married, once divorced, his jaw broken three times and his hands broken twice, meets Vic Cardell, Hartford, Conn., in a 10 round television bout at the Chicago stadium.
But legal problems, an item permanently on his list of worries since 1949, will hold up his probable payoff estimated at around $4,000. His first wife filed suit for non-support in a Chicago court yesterday, alleging he owed her $552, while a goverment assessment of $32,000 for back taxes for 1949 also was still effective.
International Boxing Club secretary Truman Gibson said that Bratton would get nothing for toonies and that neither would the government.
"We're going to hold the money," he said, "until these cases are settled."
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It's WAR
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Elect YOUR Queen Of The Junior-Senior Prom
Freshmen - The bugle sounds! Put the class of '56 on top! Elect a freshman queen.
Sophomores - Sophomores arise! Rally 'round the flag. Crown your candidate queen.
Juniors - Battle scared veterans! Vote down the upstarts.
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Vis-Ed Cards for Language students.
Schaum's Outline Series for chemistry, calculus geometry, and physics students.
How To Solve Series for qualitative, quantitative, and physical chemistry students.
Look Them Over Today At The
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1952
A
GADGET SAVES HER LIFE—A $32 transformer was credited with saving the life of student nurse Miss Darline Timke, one hour and 45 minutes after her heart stopped during an operation in Chicago. Although surgeons massaged her heart and restored circulation, they could not stimulate a normal heart beat until electrodes rigged to the transformer at the hospital were applied. An electric charge set the muscles working properly and saved the patient's life.
muscles working properly and saved the patient's life.
Today's recipes for Apfelkuchen or apple cake and Mandelplätzchen or almond cookies are favorites at the home of Mrs. J. A. Lurzle. Her husband is chairman of the department of German at the University.
German Recipes For Desserts Given
Anfelkuchen
Dough.
2 cups flour
1 cup butter (or margarine).
2 tablespoons sugar.
1 lemon (juice and rind).
2 egg yolks. 1 egg white.
Filling
4 apples sliced thin (tart ones are best).
$ \frac{3}{4} $ cups sugar.
1/4 cup raisins.
1 teaspoon cinnamon.
1/4 cup chopped nuts (preferably almonds).
Mix flour, butter, egg yolks and sugar. Knead with hand. Add a lemon juice and grated rind of lemon. When well mixed place in refrigerator for several hours. Roll dough about one-fourth inch thick and divide in two parts. Line a tin about nine inches square with half the dough. Crinkle dough with fine bread humbs. Fill with apples, raisins, almonds, sugar and cinnamon, with remaining dough. Brush top with slightly beaten egg and sprinkle with chopped nuts. Bake for 35 minutes in a medium oven (350 degrees). Serve warm or cold with shipped cream.
Mandelplatzchen
1 cup butter.
1 cup butter.
3/4 cup sugar.
1/2 cup ground almonds (un-
blanched).
4 cup sugar
2 cups flour.
Cream butter and sugar. Add four and almonds. Knead with hands until smooth and well-blended. Place in ice box for several hours. Roll out quite thin and cut out small round cookies.
Official Bulletin
KU Mountaineering club, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, 402 Lindley.
YWCA Cabinet meeting, 5:30 today. Henley house. Speaker on UMT.
Psychology club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 9 Strong. Dr. Henry David, psychologist and Dr. Paul Toussieng, psychiatrist, Topeka State Hospital, speakers.
YWCA all-membership meeting 4 p.m. Thursday, 2nd floor Myers. "Invest your Summer" topic.
International club, 8 p.m. Friday.
Hawk's Nest Platform, dance party.
Bring any musical records from your country. All welcome.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7:15 tonight. 106 Old Journalism bldg. All members and pledges attend.
Tryouts for "College Daze" Military Science bldg., Feb. 25, 26, and 27.
Openings for editor and business manager of K-Book, K-Calendar and Student Directory, written applications submitted to Bill Stinson, Dean of Men's office, deadline March 1. Contact Bill Stinson, for details.
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship
7.30 p.m. Thursday, 206 Strong, Dick Gray of Topeka, speaker. All welcome.
Jay Janes, 3:30 today, Pine Room Memorial, Union.
Square Dance club, 7:30 tonight,
Recreation room, Memorial Union.
Party has been postponed.
Home Ec. club, 4 p.m. Thursday, dining room of Fraser hall. Dean Lawson speaker.
KuKu's, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, 105 Green. Important.
IVCF missionary meeting, 12 noon to 12.50, Friday, Danforth Chapel.
Lindley's Kansas Cleaners WHERE QUALITY IS FIRST
Brush half of them with egg white and sprinkle with chopped almonds. Bake cookies at 325 degrees until light brown. Cool and spread the plain cookies with raspberry jam and place the ones covered with chopped almonds on top.
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Men's Suits EACH
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Mary Gayle Loveless, Delta Delta Delta, Hutchinson, to Jerry Robertson, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Dallas, Texas.
Donna Lee Hillier, Corbin hall,
Hiawatha, to Bradley F. Keith,
Lambda Chi Alpha, Hiawatha.
Susan Forney, Kappa Alpha Theta, Topeka, to James Perry, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Clayton, Mo.
Men's Suits
Jacquelyn Canfield, Sellards hall. Coldwater, to Marvin Mog, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Wilson.
Methodists To Give Supper
A special supper-program, sponsored by the Wesley Foundation will be given at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Methodist church. Dr. Charles I. Coldsmith, guest speaker, will discuss "The Way of John Wesley."
Program chairmen are Roger Youmans, program; Ronald Sammons, worship; Ehlyn Bird, decoration; Diana Kendall, tickets; and Janice Van Meter, hosts.
All tickets must be purchased by Wednesday. The tickets are 50 cents.
Campus Pinnings
Murphy To Speak Thursday
Harry Darby, former senator from Kansas, will be given the Dr. Julius Rabin interfaith and interacial award for his leadership and particularly in recognition of his work for victims of the flood last summer.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will speak at the national Brotherhood week ceremonies Thursday night in the ballroom at the Town house.
All welcome.
Chess club, 7:15 tonight, 111 strong
Quill club, 7 tonight, Pine room, Union.
All Student Council meeting 7.30 p.m. Thursday, 106 Strong
in au Alpha important meeting,
and strong, pledges at
attendance required.
Sigma Delta Chi banquet open to all Journalism students, 6 p.m. Friday, Hotel Eldridge, Sign for tickets UDK Business office by 5 today.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira
mercredi a sept heures et demie
dans la salle 113 Strong.
Campus Affairs meeting, 7:15 to night. 222 Strong.
Make application for following positions on "College Daze" and turn in to Student Union Activities office or Dick Klassen by noon Feb 21. Costumes, make-up, programs, editor, art editor, advertising manager, ticket chairman, secretarial staff, vocal director.
Deutscher Verein, Donnerstag 5 p.m. 502 Fraser. Es singt Dale Moore Am keavier Martha Heck.
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"DECISION BEFORE DAWN" HAS JUST BEEN NOMINATED BY THE MOTION PICTURE ARTS AND SCIENCES, AS ONE OF THE 5 BEST PICTURES OF THE YEAR . . . DON'T MISS IT!
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Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by cash. It must be called in during the hour 10 a.m. to cease publication (or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals will be delivered at 3:45 p.m. the day before publication data.
One three Five
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TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether by car or bus. Uniformed nurses. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Service, 1015 Mass.
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Ask us about family rates, ski coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
a ticket for the summer. Call Miss Glesseman at
National Bank for information and
reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 201-835-4687.
FOR RENT
GRADUATE STUDENT wants young
years to go to college.
Zear campus. Call 2519R evenings.
2519R
BUSINESS SERVICE
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new semester with higher grades. Only typewriters cost $2.50 per month for portable and standard machines. 22
Union Book Store. 22
OREAD BARBERSHOP for expert barber service on the Hill. 8:00 to 5:30 Dry Cleaning. Charley Coffman and Bernard Borst. 1237 Eadre. 20
TYPING DONE promptly and accurately. Bring to Mrs. Merritt at 1409 Rhode Island, 2nd floor apartment, or call 2670J. 20
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N. H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biologi- reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Riosworth 838 Ln. Aa. 4, upstairs. Ph. ??75J.
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SPRING and SUMMER
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**IYAHAWKERS:** Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store and you can get one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
COCKER PUPPIES. Registered. 10-weeks old. Parti-colored. Weaned and just right for training. Mrs. E. E. Alexander, 345 Mississippi, Ph. 11838. 21
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, dessert, and homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m.
until midnight.
University Daily Kansan
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks,
sandwiches, maltos, home-made pies and
air-conditioned. Our space for customers
a.m.-till midnight. Crystal Cafe, 690 Vt.
1948 BUICK special sedon and 1949 Pont-
four special sedon. In lieu of the 111
Lindley, or phone Lawrence 822. 820.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass.
DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS* Fpelican Graphos instruments are here. For draw-
from the large selection now available at your Student Union Book Store 22
ROYAL QUIET deluxe portable typewriter, in excellent condition. Phone Jack Folsom, 99, or see at 1505 Ohio. 22
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ments and are offering fast efficient service. Bowman Radial and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
Page 7
Have your FOUNTAIN PEN REPAIRED
Student Union Book Store. Repair work
Student Union Book Store.
FOR SALE
Special rates to Students on subscriptions to TIME, LIFE, AND NEWSWEEK magazines. Order books today at the Student Union Book Store. 22
New shipment of POCKET BOOKS Just them at the Student University Book Store.
FOUND
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
estate buyers. William J. Vasey,
Almen, 3110R.
SILVER-MESH evening purse lost in vicinity of Community building, or in front of Watkins hall, Friday night. Reward. Call Virginia England at 900. 1234567890.
MISCELLANEOUS
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1952
A SLIDE RULE, during final week.
Owner may have by identifying and paying for this ad. Call Less Owen, phone 2916M. 20
LEATHER PERFEX camera cover.
Phone 2569. Ask for Marion Roeser. 22
LOST
If You're Tired Of Texts, Try The Periodical Room
If you complain because you have nothing to read except textbooks you should go to the periodical room of Watson library.
In this room approximately 1,500 periodicals are available to students during library hours. Included in the list are 40 of the larger newspapers, 175 small newspapers from towns throughout the state, 50 of the leading magazines in separate folders and 1,200 specialized periodicals in individual boxes located around the room.
The larger newspapers include such papers as the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Christian Science Monitor, and several larger Kansas allies such as the Topeka Capital, the Wilmington Eagle, the Hutchinson News Herald and others.
Most of the small papers are weeklies which give the student news of his home town.
The Saturday Evening Post, Life,
Look, Newsweek and Popular
Photography are a few of the magazines
group which have separate
folders.
Boxes around the edge of the periodical room contain copies of trade journals and other specialized magazines in such fields as business, economics, languages, journalism, pharmacy, sociology, physical education, science and many others.
BLUE PLASTIC bilbilloid containing identification, driver's license, and $16.00. If not the money, but return the papers. Patty Edwards, 420 West Hickory Phone 860. 26
Back issues are also kept on reserve so students may use them for reference.
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BOY TO BUS dishes 12:30 to 1:30 for
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Dr. Kenneth E. Anderson, associate professor of education, will speak at a meeting of the American Educational Research association, department of the National Education association, in St. Louis, Fe 23 to 26.
Man
for you.
Buddy
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634 Mass. Ph.1000
Education Professor To St. Louis Meeting
Faith In God Enriches One's Life Says AWS Workshop Lecturer
Faith in a Being greater than one's self enriches life and is essential to a well-rounded personality, Harry Adamson, director of religious education for the Hutchinson Presbyterian church told the Associated Women Students' leadership workshop in Strong Auditorium Feb. 14
ship in St. Louis, Auditorium FOE. 14,
Speaking on "The Cornerstone for
Leadership," the former junior high
school principal said that while it
is possible to be a civic or social
leader without the church, "dynamic
fellowship with God is necessary for
a rounded personality."
Faith develops confidence and a sense of security, Mr. Adamson said. It is also indicative of knowledge and gives a sense of satisfaction and inner poise that is lacking when we are too busy with other things.
"Composure comes from sharing with others faith in something greater than we," he said. He pointed out that faith must be either shared or lost.
Evidences of God and faith Him are found in individual people such as "yourself and the perse beside you," he explained.
Another Shoggy Dog Story
"The church is for the sharing joyous experiences as well as refuge in time of sorrow or danger he said. "Remember you are more than a mere woman or a citizen a country or community, you are a child of God and have the responsibilities of that position."
"Age is not a matter of years, be a matter of attitudes," he said. "You are old when the light that come from faith in God goes out of you life."
Plattsmouth, Neb.—(U.P.)—A smo boy riding on a sled pulled slowly by a dog halted at a parking metic in the business district. He stuck penny in the meter and left the do waiting on the sled while he wei into a store nearby.
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Starts Sat. Owl SUNDAY GRANADA
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1952
News Roundup
NATO Powers To Discuss German Rearmament Plan
Lisbon, Portugal—(U.P.)The 14 North Atlantic treaty powers meet today to approve the rearmament of Western Germany and speed the creation of a 1,400,000-man European army.
So bright were the prospects for success at the crucial ninth NATO conference that U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson made plans to leave Lisbon Sunday—a week ahead of schedule.
The most important work of the conference actually already had been done in London, where the Big Three Foreign Ministers worked out a compromise formula with West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to bring West Germany into the projected European army.
Rearmed German units would fight in the supra-national European army alongside contingents from France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg and Italy. The European army in turn would join U.S., Canadian, British, Turkish, Greek, Portuguese, Norwegian, Danish and Icelandic forces under the supreme NATO command of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Marine Draftees Enter Korean Combat
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea (U.P.) The first U.S. Marine draftees to enter a combat zone since World War II landed in the biggest batch of Marine replacements yet sent to Korea.
The 900 Leathernecks—nearly half of them conscripts—marched off the transport Gen. William Wiegel at an East Korean port in sub-freezing weather as the sun shone brilliantly on the snow-covered ground.
They arrived at a time when Korean ground fighting had dwindled to minor probes and patrolling action. Front dispatches said opposing patrols traded only "patty cake" punches.
School Funds Made To Kansas Counties
Topeka—(U.P.)—More than half a million dollars in state school funds was made to the 105 counties of Kansas today on the basis of $1.23 per child.
The total amount, $552,348 48, was the largest in recent years. It compares with $15,332 in 1951 when $1.14 per child was distributed, Adel F. Throckmorton, state school superintendent, said.
Annual state school fund payments go to all elementary school districts except those not maintaining a school in at least three months of the previous year.
Strike Halts Buses In San Francisco
San Francisco—(U.P.)—City-wide bus and streetcar transportation came to a halt in San Francisco early today when members of the AFL carmen's union voted to go out on strike.
The vote came at a meeting of the union after city officials had threatened to suspend 97 cable car operators who walked off their jobs Sunday in protest against a new schedule that spread the work on some shifts beyond 11 hours.
Bankruptcy Hearings To Resume Mar. 24
Dodge City—(U.P.)-The creditors hearing on the Garden Grain and Seed company, of Garden City has been recessed until March 24.
R. E. Sloan, federal referee in bankruptcy, ordered the recess Tuesday after more testimony by Wayne S. Marteney, 40-year-old rocketed into a million dollar business in less than four years.
State Attorney General Harold Fatzer cross-examined the grain operator Tuesday in an effort to unravel the mysterious shortage of grain, owned by some 200 southwest Kansas farmers.
Brannan To Speak In Topeka Next Week
Washington—(U.P.) —Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannan, one of President Truman's best campaigners in 1948, is scheduled to make his first political speech of the current election year in Topeka next week.
The content of the speech became apparent when a spokesman announced it would be a "non-agricultural" talk before a Washington day dinner audience.
Senate OK Seen For New RFC Head
Washington — (U.P.) — Opponents conceded today that Harry A. McDonald will win easy Senate confirmation as RFC administrator.
McDonald, former head of the securities & exchange commission, was approved for the RFC post by the Senate. Banking committee Tuesday.
He would succeed W. Stuart Symington, who retired Feb. 15, as head of the multi-billion dollar federal lending agency.
Tax Investigations To Wind Up Today
San Francisco — (U.P.)— The King committee plans to wind up its investigation of local internal revenue bureau scandals today, convinced that tax collectors should be taken out of politics.
Chairman Rep. Cecil R. King said a statement will be prepared on results of the house ways and means of the tree's two and a half weeks of heartiness.
King said the committee had been "hampered" in its work by the fact that the hearings coincided with federal grand jury investigations and indictments of several former tax office officials.
18 Seamen In Storm Reach Shore Safely
Boston — (U.P.) — Eighteen more seamen from one of two storm-shattered tankers reached safety ashore after leaving 13 "stay put" ships to battle the sea off Cape Horn in hope of salvaging one of the bulls.
The 18 were from the 10,000-ton Fort Mercer which, with its twin tanker Pendleton, split in half under pounding by mountainous seas during a weekend nor'easter. Of the combined crews of 84 men on the two vessels, 14 were lost.
Addressing a joint meeting of the Abilene Chamber of Commerce the Junior Chamber of Commerce and civic clubs Tuesday Arn contended that the Truman administration is stifling the initiative in business.
Arn Wants Return To Republican Ideals
Abilene—(U.R.)-Gov. Edward F Arn wants a return to Republican principles in the federal government.
Washington—(U.P.)—American battle casualties in Korea now total 105,841, an increase of 333 over last week's report, the defense department said today.
Although speaking in Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's home town, the governor avoided a public endorsement of the general's bid for the Republican presidential nomination.
U.S. Casualty List Mounts To 105,841
The figures represent total casualties from beginning of the Korean war whose next of kin have been notified through last Friday.
The casualties include 18,347 deaths, 75,068 wounded, 10,042 missing, 995 captured, 1,389 previously missing but returned to service.
Editor To Talk To Journalists At SDX Dinner
Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, Boston, will be the guest speaker at the Sigma Delta Chi initiation banquet at 6 p.m. Friday in the Crystal room of the Hotel Eldridge.
All students and faculty in the School of Journalism, employees of the University Press and their wives; and anyone interested in journalism are invited. Persons desired for this design by 5 p.m. Wednesday in the University Daily Kansan Business office, 111 Journalism building.
As principal speaker for the dedication of the new journalism building, Mr. Canham will deliver several addresses during the dedication weekend; the first being at 9:20 a.m. Friday at an 'all-student convocation in Hoch auditorium.
Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, will hold its initiation at 5:15 the same evening at the hotel.
Mr. Canham joined the Monitor staff in 1925 and covered the annual sessions of the League of Nations in 1926-28. He served as head of the Monitor's Washington bureau from 1932 to 1939, news editor from 1939 to 1941, and as managing editor from 1941 to 1944.
The Boston editor was president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in 1949 and since the war has served in various official capacities in the struggle for freedom of information.
Interviews
Personnel representatives from eight companies will interview June graduates in Maryin hall this week.
Today
Corn Products Refining company will speak to chemical engineers.
Beech Aircraft corporation is interested in electrical, mechanical, aeronautical engineers and architects.
Dow Chemical company of Midland, Michigan needs chemists chemical and mechanical engineers
Thursday
Kansas Power and Light company can use all type engineers.
Shell Oil company representatives will interview electrical, mechanical, civil and geological engineers; geologists and chemists.
Radio Corporation of America (RCA Victor division) has openings for electrical and mechanical engineers; chemists and physicists.
Shell Oil
RCA
Friday
Staniloid Oil and Gas company can employ electrical and geological engineers, geologists, physicists and mathematicians.
Dow Chemical of Freeport, Texas is interested in chemists and chemical engineers.
Sinclair Refining company needs chemical, mechanical and electrical engineers.
Personnel representatives from the following companies will be at the School of Business to interview June and August graduates interested in positions in trade and industry.
Interested persons should sign schedule in engineering office.
Radio Corporation of America
Thursday
Kansas Power & Light Company
Acacia Mutual Life Insurance
Corporation
Touche, Niven, Bailey & Smart
Trouble
Tuesday
Wednesdav
General Electric Company
Interested persons may sign the interview schedules in the business placement bureau office, 214 Strong hall.
Dr. Weir To Address Group
Dr. J. A. Weir, assistant professor of zoology, will speak on "The Geology of a Meeting at a meeting of the Limaena club, to tomorrow at 12 noon, 417 Snow."
Margueritte L. Kuna, of the personnel department of Hall Brothers, Inc., will discuss job opportunities in that company at a coffee party to be held at 4 p.m. today in the AWS lounge.
Card Representative To Speak To AWS
Miss Kuna will tell the students about the different jobs available in the greeting card company in Kansas City.
--high school character are necessary. Students who have completed three and one-half years in the required fields may apply for the commissions now and enter the reserve program after graduation.
Offer Graduates Reserve Ranks
Commissions in the Air Force reserve are now open to college graduates with degrees in engineering, mathematics, physics or chemistry.
The Air Force department has set up an interim program designed to meet shortages in certain technical specialties such as electronics, communications, weather and research, and development.
To qualify for a second lieutenant's rating the applicant must be under 27 years of age and in good physical condition. United States citizenship is required and references stating the applicant is of high moral character are necessary.
Applications should be submitted to the USAF recruiting service group, 711 Quincy, Topeka.
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Photos 20----$1.00.
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Adelane's
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VACATION Anywhere, USA FASHION SHOW
Thursday, February 21 Jayhawker Theatre
8:00 p.m.
ALSO SEE THE MOVIE "DISC JOCKEY"
STARRING RUSS MORGAN - TOMMY DORSEY
ADELANE'S 823 Mass.
Kansas State Historical Society
University Daily Kansan
49th Year, No. 94
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
Distinguished Editor Will Be Convocation Speaker Friday
Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, will discuss "Newspapers and the Survival of Free Society" at 9:20 a.m. Friday at the University convocation in Hoch auditorium.
Mr. Canham, who joined the Monitor staff in 1925, covered the sessions of the League of Nations in 1926-28. He was chairman of the Monitor's Washington bureau from 1932-39, news editor, 1939-'41, and managing editor, 1941-'44.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and John P. Harris, president of the William Allen White foundation, will introduce the speaker. Mr. Lanham is the third annual speaker brought to the University by the foundation.
First period classes will meet from 8 to 8:30 a.m. and second period classes from 8:40 to 9:10. The convocation will be at 9:20. Third period classes will meet from 10:40 to 11:10 and 11 a.m. classes from 11:20 to 11:50.
Morning classes will run on the following schedule:
Oratory Finals Are Tonight
Finals for the annual Lorraine Buehler Oratorical contest begin at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium. The contest is open to the public.
Kent Shearer, first year law student and winner of last year's contest. will be master of ceremonies.
Six finalists will compete for the first prize of a set of Encyclopedia Americana. Second prize is $20 and third prize is $10. E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, will award the prizes at the end of the program.
William A. Conboy, instructor of speech, said this contest is considered the best example of student speaking during the year.
No Facts Found On Tuesday Thefts
Police today reported "no new developments" in their investigation of $240 in thefts from cars during the KU-Oklahoma A and M game Tuesday night.
Owners of four cars parked in the vicinity of Hoch auditorium reported to police that radios, a flashlight, and other personal effects were taken. One owner reported that thieves had also siphoned gas from his car.
All but one of the cars were from off-town. The owners are Stan Trazier, 1324 Tennessee street; H. D. Frazier, Topeka; Harry Austin, Forbes Air Force base, Topeka, and H. J. Nicol, Great Falls, Montana.
University police have joined Lawrence police in the investigation.
Geologist To Talk On Clay Problems
Dr. Ben B. Cox, director of the geological division of the Gulf Research and Development company will speak on "Clay Problems" today at 7:30 p.m., 426 Lindley.
Dr. Cox's special interest is improving methods of discovering and recovering oil deposits. He is well known for his work in evaluating attitudes toward resources and considering time in detail mapping ecological and mineral resources.
While on the campus, Dr. Cox will inspect the State Geological survey and the laboratories in the geology department. He will confer with Miss Ada Swineford who is in charge of the petrography division
and Norman Plummer of the ceram division.
Service Awards For June Grads
Students interested in public affairs and public service careers who will receive their Bachelor degrees next June may apply for fellowships carrying awards of $1,200 a year. Beginning in June, fellows will serve an internship with a public agency such as the Tennessee Valley authority, a city manager's office or a department of state government. They may take graduate courses at the Universities of Alabama, Tennessee or Kentucky.
They may receive a master's degree at either of the three participating universities upon satisfactorily completing the master's thesis requirement and after passing examinations for the master's degree.
Completion of the 12-month training period entitles fellows to a certificate in public administration.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
For additional information students should see Prof. Ethan Allen, chairman of the political science department, or write to the educational director, Southern Regional Training Program in Public Administration, University of Alabama at University, Alabama. Applications should be submitted before March 1.
African Expert On Air Sunday
John George, an associate of the Institute of Current World Affairs, will speak at 9:45 a.m. Sunday, on the Sociology on the Air broadcast on station KLWN. His topic will be "East Africa Today—An Appraisal."
He is a nationally known authority on politics, international relations and social problems on the African continent.
Mr. George was a visitor on the campus last week. He has just returned to his country from East Africa where he has done research among the natives.
Cloudy tonight and Friday with occasional light rain in east Friday and light rain or snow in the northwest. Warmer tonight turning somewhat colder in the west Friday.
Mr. George was educated at Princeton and Oxford universities, and has served in China, Burma, India, Japan and the Pacific islands.
WEATHER
Friday's Daily Kansan will be a special issue for the dedication of the new building of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Friday's Kansan To Be Special Issue
Three sections of eight pages each will include historical, feature and news articles dealing with the School of Journalism. The issue was prepared by journalism students supervised by Victor J. Danilov, assistant professor of journalism.
Gilbert Highet, classical scholar, author and education authority, will be on the campus three days next week as guest lecturer in the Humanities series.
Two College Women Star In Lab Theater Productions
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy also has asked Highet to address the entire faculty at 4 p.m. Monday in Strong auditorium. His subject will be "Time, Change and the Teacher."
He will deliver the Humanities lecture on "The Migration of Ideas" at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 26, in Fraser theater.
Scotch Author To Give Lecture
His latest two books, "The Classical Tradition: Greek and Roman Influences on Western Literature," published in 1949, and "The Art of Teaching," 1950, have enjoyed great sales and are being reprinted. Translations are also being made into Spanish, Italian and Japanese.
Highet, a Scotsman educated at Glasgow and Oxford universities, has taught at Columbia university since 1937, except for five years of war service. He is now Anthon professor of Latin at Columbia.
Mrs. Highet, a successful novelist, will accompany her husband. She is known in the literary world as Helen Machnness. Among her books are "Neither Five Nor Three," "Rest and Be Thankful," "While Still We Live," "Assignment in Brittany" and "Above Suspicion."
Carillon Program To Be 3 p.m. Sunday
By BOB NOLD
The carillon program to be heard at 3 p.m. Sunday will include the following selections:
"Variations for Carillon" by Feremans, "Hail the Conquering Hero" by Handel, "Suite Louis XV" by Clement, "Minuet" by Magensil and "The Camptown Races" by Foster.
Outstanding performances by Mary Beth Moore, college junior, and Jo Anna March, college sophomore, highlighted an exceptionally fine lab theater presentation Wednesday in the Little Theater of Green hall.
Miss Moore's magnificent performance as Ann in "At the Shrine" portrayed an immoral woman who was convinced by a priest to give up the one man she really loved. Her facial expressions corresponded with Thomas Shay, instructor of speech, was excellent as the priest.
Miss March as Fame highlighted the show in "Fame and the Poet." Her unexpected attitude toward the poet to whom she brought fame created a hilarious effect.
The casting for the play was excellent. Each actor performed superbly.
James Wallace, fine arts freshman,
The lab theater presentation will be given again at 8 p.m. today and Friday.
Mark Gilman, college sophomore, was exceptionally good in "Heavens" as Charles Kingman, ex-businessman who found heaven disappointing. Others in the satirical comedy were William Thompson, college freshman, as St. Peter; Mary Siebert, college freshman as Alice Bartlett, and Barbara Donovan, college senior, as Mrs. Kingman.
played Dick Prattle, the materialistic friend of the poet. James York, fine arts sophomore, played Harry DeReves.
Authority On Far East To Give Lectures Here
Albert Ravenholt, an associate with the Institute of Current Work Affairs, will be here Feb. 25 to begin a five-day series of lectures and discussions on the Far East.
Mr. Ravenholt has worked in Hong Kong, Formosa and the Philippines. He has done advanced work at Harvard university on Far Eastern affairs.
Mr. Ravenholt has also been a correspondent for the Chicago Daily News Foreign service since 1948.
Mr. Ravenholt's schedule will be:
Monday, Feb. 25
9 a.m., Editorial class, 210 Journalism. Topic: "What important background facts are needed to understand news out of South East Asia?"
z p.m., Current American Foreign Policies, 1 Strong Annex E. Topic;
ALBERT RAVENHOLT
Noon, Luncheon with planning committee. Faculty club.
"What happens when a community undergoes rapid change and endures stress? Examples in Asia in recent years."
Tuesday. Feb. 26
Tuesday, Feb. 20
9 a.m., Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union, 116 Strong. Topic:
"Rise of Communism in China."
10 a.m., The U. S. in East Asia, 116 Strong. Topic: "Effects of our policies in East Asia."
Noon, Luncheon with Journalism faculty. Faculty club.
2 p.m. Democracy Today, 114 Strong. Topic: "Attitudes toward democracy in East Asia."
Wednesday Feb 27
10 a.m., Cultural Anthropology, 18 Strong Annex E. Topic: "Comparison of cultures in East Asia."
Noon, Luncheon with political science faculty, Faculty club.
2 p.m., Communications in Society, 205 Journalism. Topic: "Best preparation for a career as foreign correspondent."
7 p.m., Informal discussion with Journalism students.
Thursday Feb 28
Thursday, Feb. 28
10 a.m., Contemporary Civilization,
16 Striped Annex E. Topic:
"Contrasts in culture between East Asia and the United States and/or other countries."
Noon, Luncheon with history faculty. Faculty club.
2 p.m., Editorial Problems and Policies, 217 Journalism. Topic: Background data and current information about 0 interpret news out of the Orient."
8 p.m., University club, 1007% Massachusetts street. Topic: "Eye Witness from Asia."
Mr. Ravenholt's headquarters will be at the chancellor's office. Appointments for personal interviews should be made directly with Mr. Ravenholt, or through that office.
3. 15 p.m. European Governments, 202 Strong. Topic: "Political parties of South East Asia and their relations to the various world powers."
Cast Announced For Coming Play
The leading role will be played by Mrs. Mary Lou Lane Jukes, graduate student.
The cast for "The Lady's Not For Burning," a poetic comedy to be presented by the speech and drama department Wednesday, Feb. 27, through Saturday, March 1, has been announced by Tom Rea, instructor in speech and director of the production.
Only a week ago Mrs. Jukes was informed that she had been selected to appear on "Philip Morris Playhouse on Broadway" sometime this spring. She will play the part of Jennet, the witch, in the University play.
Other characters in the play include Dee Ann Price, fine arts freshman, Alizon; Jim Claussen, college junior, Nicholas; Lynn Osborn, college senior; Richard; Dan Palmquem, graduate student, Tapperoom, and Bill Sollner, graduate student, Humphrey.
"The Lady's Not For Burning," written by Christopher Fry, is a whimsical fable about a cynical ex-soldier who reluctantly falls in love with an exchanting young woman sentenced to be burned as a witch
The production will be presented at 8 p.m. each evening in Fraser theater.
Proficiency Exam To Be March 8
The spring semester proficiency examination in English composition will be given at 2 p.m. Saturday, March 8. for students of junior and senior standing in the College of Education, William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and School of Fine Arts.
Students must register in person on March 3, 4 or 5. Any student who fails to register will not be admitted to the examination.
Registration will be held for college students at the college office, 229 Strong; education students at the education office, 103 Fraser; journalism majors at the journalism office, 105 Journalism, and fine arts majors at the fine arts office, 128 Strong.
Wolfe To Address Mariners
William Wolfe, superintendent of the Lawrence public schools, will speak on "The Home and the School" at Mariners club 6 p.m. Friday at Westminster house. A carry-in supper for young married students will precede Mr. Wolf's talk.
KU-K State Game To Be Televised
The Kansas - Kansas State basketball game March 7 in Hoch auditorium will be televised by station WDAF-TV, it was announced today.
This means that the contest, which may decide the Big Seven conference championship, will be pressed by a record number of fans.
Kansas State currently is ranked second in the nation, with a conference record of 7-0. The Jayhawkers, seventh in the nation have won seven and lost one in Big Sis' boasting a 18-2 over-all record.
No more tickets are available for the game.
4
481 15 20
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
Editorials
Daily Kansan Editorial Was Not Understood
The Daily Kansan has committed the cardinal sin of journalism — it has failed to make itself clear.
Qn Feb. 14 a Daily Kansan editorial advanced several questions concerning the value of the language requirement. The object of those questions was to determine whether "the study of foreign languages is valuable, as valuable as an equal amount of time spent in other courses."
There was no attempt to discredit the study of foreign languages or classify them as having no value. The editorial simply attempted to determine the worth of language courses as related to certain major fields; yet language proponents not only have insisted the requirement should be accepted as having great and equal worth in every field, but have questioned the Daily Kansan's motives.
These critics also have failed to submit reasonable grounds for the requirement. Instead, they have reiterated, with a good deal of complacency, the arbitrary reasons of "mental discipline," "culture" and "grammar training" with which the Dally Kansan first took issue.
Critics of the editorial have seemed to agree that the average student is a lazy and slightly stupid character whose main worry is how to get a degree with as little work as possible. We disagree. He is not lazy and he is not stupid. Because he is not stupid, because he does think, he does not willingly accept the old bromides about how he is too young to know what is good for him.
Talk of a collegiate sports de-emphasis following last year's scandals has caused a lot of attention to be focused on college athletic departments.
The Daily Kansan feels the questions raised in the original editorial, ridiculed but as yet unanswered, are still valid. Reasonable and sincere answers will be welcomed. —J.W.Z.
Defends Athletes In Phys Ed
Some persons in attempting to explain the situation have smeared the physical education programs. By using a few bad examples in illustrating their points, degrees in the field have been cheapened.
President Howard L. Bevis of Ohio State has risen in defense against this. He denies that a physical education department is just a "haven for none-too-bright athletes" who were in school only to play football. He says:
"Professional preparation in physical education is not a place of refuge for scholastically incompetent athletes in most universities today. To be sure, many athletes select physical education as their major area of study. . . They wish to become teachers of physical education in schools and colleges ..."
"The preparation they undergo leading to bachelor of science or bachelor of arts degrees is good, solid stuff," continued Dr. Bevis. "It is based upon a study of the life sciences such as physiology, psychology, chemistry and sociology and involves thorough preparation in the study of education itself, its principles and methods."
Dr. Bevis concludes his statement by saying that while there may be substandard departments of physical education, likewise there are sub-standard departments of history or English. And if all of the latter types of departments are not to be judged by the few which are sub-standard, then the physical education departments also should not receive that treatment. Joe Taylor.
PEACE
ALL RACES
ALL CREEDS
BROTHERHOOD
Letters:
'Positive' Attitude Toward Studies Wanted
Sir:
Permit me to comment on your editorial entitled "Old Reasons Not Valid for Language Study."
To begin with, I rather find your insistence upon a controversy like an ax you wish to grind, for I was not aware that controversy existed on that matter at KU. However, since you are eager to start one you will find quite a few rising to the bait, pro and contra.
Actually, the question of whether or not language study is essential may be termed academic. No institution laying claim to producing graduates of rank has so far found it possible to do without foreign languages. The reasons you vilify happen to be perfectly sound and time-tested.
Language does provide a particular kind of mental discipline—memory facility, to be exact. It does improve the student's understanding of his native tongue, through comparative grammatical structure. Lastly, it offers new cultural horizons which add to the overall background of the individual, even though his knowledge of the language remains fragmentary. Old reasons for language courses, to be sure, but hardly invalid.
As for the time "wasted" by these courses and the possible substitution of advanced English and other courses for them, let me be blunt: students
simply would not take them. Why not face the facts? Don't undergraduates generally look for less and easier ways of obtaining BA's? Aren't they the same people who hate Shakespeare, find Western Civilization a dull chore, and feel uncomfortable in an English proficiency test?
Aren't these the future citizens who ask for courses which will advance them materially, and who will later rise up in arms against the corruption in public services? Yet, who among them takes his course seriously? Who among them voluntarily exposes himself to the arts of men, the very endeavors which indicate a nation's civilization? Those who do will not complain about language or any other courses.
I disdain to enumerate the practical uses of foreign language study here and refer you to students from the science departments.
I should welcome very much a positive attitude toward all studies whether or not they appear necessary at the time of taking. Most of the students with whom I come into contact admit that what they really need is good study habits and not stuffy editorials about courses whose value cannot be assessed until years hence.
Dr. Hans Juergensen, Instructor in German.
Comments ..
Eisenhower Leads All Other Candidates . .
Results of the latest Associated Collegiate Press poll reveal that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower is the most popular presidential candidate with college students.
He is strongest in the East and Southwest, weakest on the Pacific coast. Earl Warren, his nearest rival for the college vote, has good support in his home state of California and in other parts of the far West.
Students all over the nation were asked by the ACP national poll of student opinion: Which of the 10 candidates listed below would you prefer to win? Here are the answers:
1. Dwight Eisenhower ... 36%
2. Earl Warren ... 17%
3. Harold Stassen ... 10%
4. Robert Taft ... 10%
5. Harry Truman ... 7%
6. Paul Douglas ... 6%
7. Douglas MacArthur ... 6%
8. Estes Kefauver ... 4%
9. Fred Vinson ... 2%
10. Paul Hoffman ... 1%
11. No opinion ... 1%
Two students at Washington university, St. Louis, have started a "cake service." Here's how it works:
Parents of out-of-town students who want to remember their son's birthday order a cake from the two students. The cake is delivered right to the son's dormitory door. For a small extra charge, other birthday gifts will be purchased and delivered.
Provide Birthday Cakes
"Most assuredly the student deserves and reserves the right to say where his two-bits goes. If he doesn't want a copy of Sketch, it's his business. Therefore we must conclude it was the magazine. Perhaps the material presented, which was student-authored, was too much like Freshman English themes. . ."
Paul Douglas gains most of his strength from the large universities, but he is practically unnoticed in the smaller colleges. Harold Stassen, on the other hand, is in the opposite situation, having most of his support from small colleges in the Middle West.
Literary Magazine Folds
The Sketch, literary magazine at Iowa State College, has folded. Main reason: didn't sell. Commented the Iowa State Daily:
Proposal 'A Step Backward'
Fifty-six senators last week took another step backward with a proposal for a constitutional amendment to prevent international agreements which "... undermine the sovereignty of the United States.
Article VI of the Constitution provides that all treaties shall be the law of the land. According to Senator Bricker of Ohio, spokesman for the group, this provision leaves a loophole in the Constitution which should be plugged up.
Representing 46 Republicans and 13 Democrats, he admits that the proposal is directed toward the United Nations, the international community of states which, it was once hoped, would rectify grievances and join together the peoples of the world.
However, it was considered the best workable type of organization. World federationists of various shades that popped up during the immediate post-war era faded rapidly because they could not appreciate the tenor of the times, nor could they understand the bare reality of power politics.
This hope constantly fades in the face of national pressures for state sovereignty. The hopeful ones realized when the UN was born it was an imperfect mechanism. The power to maintain the very peace it was striving for was lacking.
Understanding the principle of national sovereignty, they pressed no issue beyond the breaking point. Many of them still nursed personal recollections of Orlando, Clemenceau, and Lloyd George, and the fate of the League of Nations in Congress after World War I.
Designers of the United Nations, on the other hand, envisaged a strengthening of the organization in the process of time. Theirs was for a better world today, working gradually toward the coordinating teamwork that is essential for a more Utopian structure.
The UN is moving forward. Its slowness is often vexing. Patience is required—patience and the vision to grasp its potentiality.
—Charles Zuegner.
The revamped University of Nebraska's fall orientation program is geared to provide a clear-cut, expanded and official freshman orientation week and provide an official handbook designed to inform new students of University traditions, organizations, activities and customs.
The revamped orientation plan will
Under this new program each incoming student, formerly allowed about 20 minutes at enrollment time with a faculty adviser, will have at least one hour and a half with him, plus three hours of group advisory sessions.
help new students adjust more quickly and provide more time for faculty-student advisory sessions.
University Daily Kansan
News Room KU 251
Student Newspaper of the Ad Room
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Associated Collegiate Press, and Intercollegiate Press. Assn. Represented by the
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EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
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Editorial Assistants...Anne Spyder, In
**EDITORIAL STAFF**
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zohm
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman,
Joe Lastilic, Jim Powers
City Editor ... Jeanne Lombert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newman
Telegraph Editor ... Jerry Renner, Katrina Swartz
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Charles Burch
Society Editor ... Max Thempes
Assistant Society Editors ... Dianne Stonebroker
Sports Editor ... Lorena Barlow, Paulyne Patterson
News Advisor ... Jackie Lodge
News Adviser ... Victoria Miller
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager Dorothy Hedrick
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Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the United States year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered once class master Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1910.
class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1872
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Rifle Team Beats K-State
The University's Air Force ROTC rifle team won a shoulder to shoulder match from Kansas State's varsity rifle squad in Manhattan last Saturday.
The AFROTC team posted a score of 1,873 points, out of a possible 2,000, against a 1,828 score for the K-State marksmen.
The high scorer for the AFROTIC team was Max Embree, college sophomore, who posted a score of 382 out of a possible 400. Next in line was Richard Kummer, engineering senior, who shot a total of 380 points out of the possible 400.
On Mar 1, the AFROTC team will be hosts to an all day rifle match with six teams participating. They will meet KU's Navy ROTC riflemen, the University of Nebraska rifle team, the Kansas State team, the University of Wichita team and the riflemen from Washburn university of Topeka. Approximately 60 men will be shooting during the match.
Kansas State's high men were Laren Seglen, who shot a 377, and V. L. Carson, who scored 365 points.
A brotherhood award, to be presented to a member of the University community, will be sponsored by the local chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity.
Award Announced For Brotherhood
The award will be given to the student, the member of the University staff or the person in the community, who has done the most during the year to promote a feeling of brotherhood at the University. It is scheduled to be presented in May.
Benjamin Holman, fraternity president, explained that the presentation will be based on the ordinary efforts of the recipient in aiding differing groups to understand each other and live together in harmony. He said that this meant that a person need not be a crusader to be considered for the award.
The award will be a scroll. It will be known as the Kappa Alpha Psi Brotherhood award.
A screening committee has been established to prepare a list of nominees for the award. Members of the committee include Thomas Fox, pharmacy senior; Freddie Anderson, fine arts sophomore; Benjamin Holman, journalism senior; Charles Ross, pharmacy senior, and Charles Tavlor, college senior.
The award will be presented at a forum meeting on brotherhood to be sponsored by the fraternity. It will be the first presentation to be made by the local chapter.
El Centro, Calif., (U.P.)—A squad of 18 Chicago White Sox regulars and seven of their farm hands reported to Manager Paul Richards here yesterday for the formal opening of spring training.
Chicago White Sox In Spring Training
The arrivals were put through a brisk two hour drill under a hot sun.
Richards concluded practice with a short game in which the hitters passed up first base and went directly to second to get more running. During the freak drill pitcher Howie Judson hit two homers.
KAMALA
GOAT IGNORES EGYPT STRIFE—In Ismailia, Egypt, some of the British troops who formed a cordon around the city after Sister Anthony, American-born nun was shot to death during rioting, wait on the alert as they guard a road. A goat, apparently unconcerned by the military action, walks calmly on his way. The rioting in the turbulent nation subsided after King Farouk changed cabinets and put in
some new lawmakers more inclined to peaceable settlement.
Fred Palmer will be presented by the School of Fine Arts in a senior violin recital at 8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 25. in Strong auditorium.
Palmer To Give Senior Recital
He will be accompanied by his wife, Lois Bradfield Palmer, fine arts senior.
Palmer's program, will include the Sonata Opus 30, No. 1 in A major (Beethoven), the Sonata No. 6 in E major for unaccompanied violin (Bach) and the Concerto No. 3 in B minor (Saint-Saens).
He has studied with Raymond Cerf and Thomas Marrocco, professors of violin.
Palmer is concert master of the University Symphony orchestra, a member of the University Little Symphony and has played in the Kansas City university orchestra for seven seasons.
Last year he won the annual prize offered to the outstanding KU' fine arts student by the Lawrence Women's Music club.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. F. E.
Palmer of Kansas City, Kan., and is
a graduate of Wyandotte High school.
The recital is open to the public.
The winter issue of the University of Kansas Bulletin of Education is being distributed.
Education Bulletin Is Distributed
Three issues are published each year-fall, winter and spring.
This publication is a service to high school principals in Kansas and border states. It is also sent to all schools of education in the United States.
The bulletin primarily covers educational research and is designed particularly to help high school teachers in this field.
Editors of the bulletin are Kenneth E. Anderson, associate professor of education, and Oscar M. Haugh, assistant professor of education.
A HALF AN HOUR OF FUN
Edna A. Hill, professor of home economics; Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design; Wealthy Babcock, associate professor of mathematics; Clayton Crosier, assistant professor of civil engineer-ary and junior professor of design, and Leland J. Pritchard, professor of economics.
Members of the committee were announced yesterday by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. They are Henry Shenk, associate professor of physical education, chairman; Guy K. Keeler, director of lecture course; Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the alumni council; and officers, executive secretary to the chancellor; E. R. Elbel, professor of physical education.
Two college students were appointed from the senior class, Darlene Greer and Donovan Hull.
Tau Sigma, modern dance fraternity, will present its annual recital at 8 p.m., Tuesday, March 4, in Fraser theater.
Committee To Plan For Graduation
The commencement committee will hold its first meeting at 4 p.m. today in 210 Strong hall.
This year the performance will be one night only, Nancy Gilchrist, publicity chairman for the recital, announced today. Tickets will go on sale at a later date, and admission will be 50 cents.
The first half of the recital will consist of modern dance variations and the second half will be based on the theme "Toyland."
THE BILLARD TABLE IS THE NEW STANDARD FOR POOLING. IT IS A LARGE AND EASY TO USE TABLE. IT IS FABULOUS FOR GAMES.
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Tau Sigma Recital To Be March 4
Myra Roesler, college sophomore, is in charge of the recital. Lucille Allen, college sophomore, will be in charge of costumes and Shirley Strain, college junior, will be in charge of stage and lighting effects.
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
BRUNSWICK'S
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Measles Move Into Watkins Hospital
COLLEGE - JEWELER 809 Mass.
Watkins hospital reported eight cases of measles yesterday, the most it has ever had at one time.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of health service, said that while there has been scattered cases the Christian hospital cases are the most they've ever had.
the cases reported are all the common German meaples, or, as they are often called the three-day mealies. No one of them made a red "meaples" were reported.
The recent outbreak of colds on the campus and in the area has slacked off considerably since last week. Dr. Canuteson announced. "They appear to have run their gamut."
The hospital was at no time fileup, Dr. Canuteson said; the larges number of patients hospitalized at any one time was last Wednesday's count of 60 bed patients. The census dropped to a count of 38 yesterday
Giving Blood Binds Workers Together
Lorain, Ohio —(U.P) - Life-saving blood serves to cement unity among the 227 employees of the Nelson Stud Welding company here.
When the daughter of one of the workers was seriously ill last year, fellow employees volunteered to give their blood in an effort to save her life. The little girl died but the idea didn't.
Almost 90 per cent of the employees are now registered with the Lorain county hospital. When blood is needed, they are advised.
If, during an emergency, the hospital's blood bank becomes depleted, the company "loans" its employees. A credit is established in the Nelson "account," upon which to draw in future emergencies.
At the start of the 104th year here, Mrs. Plisek said she feels fine and isn't a bit thirsty.
Maybe Water Isn't So Good, After All
Brainard, Neb. — (U.P) — Mrs.
Barbara Plisek hasn't had a drink
of water since she was 91.
Her daughter, Mrs. August Herms
consists of bread, eggs, and coffee.
She is bedfast but has an excellent memory and a strong voice. She was born in Czechoslovakia and came to this country in 1894 after her marriage to Frank Plisek.
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English Art Critic To Talk On Picasso
Clive Bell, English art critic and specialist in modern art, will give a lecture on Picasso and Matisse at 3 p.m. Friday in the large lecture room of the Museum of Art.
Prof. John Maxon, director of the museum, said Mr. Bell is the best known of the older generation of English authorities. His specialization in the modern field has made Mr. Bell especially sympathetic to Picasso and Matisse. Professor Maxon said.
The lecture will be open to the public.
Music Fraternity To Give Operetta
Phyllis Clegg, graduate student, will direct the oppetetta. It will be open to the public.
Members of the cast will be Fred Tarry, sophomore; Polly Owen, sophomore; Ruth Stutz, senior, and Phyllis Nehrbass, sophomore, all fine arts majors.
'Can't Get No Body,' He Writes To Police
Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music fraternity, will present an operetta, "The Lantern Marriage," at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, March 5 and 6, in the Little Theater of Green hall.
The note added;
Louisville, Ky. — (U,P)— "I can't get nobody to change bills like hundred."
That was the quote contained in a letter to police headquarters here recently along with two 100 dollar bills a thief took from a woman's purse.
The note added.
"I ain't gonna give myself up, for I been in trouble too much . . .
I ought to say I sorry but I ain't she got more money than me . . .
I throwed the purse away."
The note also said: "I spent five ones only and gonna keep three 20s."
It was signed "Goodbye."
It's No Fun To Be Left Out
Last call is going out for those who wanted a trip to Europe for this summer. Space is just about booked solid on all tours and travel plans. Today is the time to see Downs for your reservations.
Don't say we didn't warn you if you are left out.
Remember, no service charge or booking fees at Downs. Our experienced service costs you nothing more.
Phone 3661 Open Evenings
Mrs. Lois Odaffer
Mr. Joe Brown
downs
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10156 massachusetts st.
lawrence, kansas
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
Fierce Winter Storms In Atlantic Bring Many Hardships To Residents Of Irish Islands
Dublin — (U.P.) - Fierce Atlantic storms which pounded the Irish coast this winter brought renewed fears for the future of people living on islands fringing the country's western shores.
The Aran and Blasket islands were cut off from the mainland for weeks and there was much uneasiness as the islands' stocks of food, lighting equipment, fuel and other materials dwindled dangerously low.
On Blasket island, 27 adults and one child were openly pessimistic about future life on the island after they were rescued.
They repeated the old complaints that once the Atlantic whips often vary very locally the fisherman often wait days before attempting to cross the waves.
Courageous and skilled as the fisherman are, it requires more than skill and brute strength to carry a heavy cargo of food and household equipment in the face of fierce storms. Many locals have attempted such crossings in past years. The next that was heard of them was when their bodies were found wedged in the rocks miles away.
Life on these islands is a grim business, and most of it is spent combating the Atlantic. During the warm summer months, life is meant enough but conditions fall into the primitive class in the winter.
Food, heat and strong clothes and boots become of paramount importance. There are no cinemas, theaters, shops, clubs; only a few cottages and blazing fires with excellent home-made meals.
There was no panic on the islands, simply eloom
On Blasket island, a young boy, only one on the island, got no present from Santa Claus because of the storms and his plaintive questions only made the big feast day gloomier still.
Now that the storms have abated and the islanders have obtained new stocks of food and other materials, life goes on as usual.
There is increased speculation
on the possibility of bringing many of the islanders to live on the mainland, where they could fish as profitably as ever, with no risk of being cut off from stocks of food and fuel.
Despite the rigors of their life, some of the islanders have become attached to the homes where they were born, and the older men and women are particularly reluctant to leave their heartstones.
However, should the authorities decide to take firm action, it is more than likely that sentiment will have to yield to safety first and that the islands may have only seagulls as their inhabitants.
IFC To Support Blood Campaign
Inter-Fraternity council has voted its support to a campus blood donor campaign which will be conducted later in the semester.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of health service of Watkins hospital, is head of the drive, and Loy Kirkpatrick, college junior. Tom Oliver, education senior, and Woody Davis, college senior, are student members of the campaign committee.
New executive appointees on the
Gerhard Herm, special student in the college, was honor initiate at the University Players meeting Tuesday in the Pine room of the Union.
9 Campus Police Are Deputies
University Players Name Honor Initiate
All nine officers of the campus police force have been made sheriff's deputies.
The commissions appointing the officers as deputies went into effect Monday giving the campus police jurisdiction outside of the city limits.
The campus police previously had no way of exercising any jurisdiction over University property outside the city limits. The deputized officers now may operate in both the city and county.
Herm was given membership credit for a play he wrote that is now being produced in Germany.
PRECISION WATCH REPAIRS
Watch Repair
Phil Kassebaum, college junior, chairman of Inter-Fraternity Pledge council; Marvin Rausch, college senior, rushing chairman; Bill Wilson, education junior, social chairman, and Tom White, business senior, chairman of community buying.
Council are David Hills, college junior, scholarship chairman; Kon Merrill, business senior, publicity; Frank Norris, business junior, chairman of Greek week.
Other initiates were Dee Price, fine arts freshman; Shirley Strain, college junior; William Soliner, graduate student; William Thompson, college freshman; Gerald Scott, college freshman; Eugene Walling, college junior; Gary Lehmian, college sophomore; and Joan Ketterman, education junior.
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Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No.34...THE FERRET
Let's dig a little deeper
Descended from a long line of distinguished researchers, this studious scholar has burned too many gallons of midnight oil to gloss over a subject lightly. Especially such an important item as cigarette mildness. He burrowed into the matter with his usual resolution and concluded that a "quick puff" or a "fast sniff" doesn't offer much evidence. Millions of smokers agree there's but one true test of cigarette mildness.
It's the sensible test...the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke on a day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments! Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat, T for Taste), you'll see why ...
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Rea To Use 'The Lady' For Thesis
By BOB NOLD
All during graduate study in speech and drama, Tom Rea, instructor in speech, searched for material for a production thesis.
"A play must have audience appeal," he said, "and this has it. It isn't the usual trite sort of three act play groups have to work with.
Mr. Rea said Allen Crafton, professor of speech, suggested to him that he use this play for his thesis.
"The Lady's Not For Burning."
"It was not an easy task to find a play that offered adequate material and problems to make it worth a thesis study." Mr. Rhea said.
Because he wants to work in educational and University theaters, Mr. Baxus wanted his thesis to be written on practical work rather than research.
"Over a year ago," he continued,
"when I first read Christopher Fry's
The Lady's Not For Burning, I imitated the devotee of the man and bis works.
"Since I seldom read any play without thinking of the possibilities in stage production, the immediate threat is that you may both excited and frightened me."
Of these, only one—the F-86 or Sabre jet—can stand up in combat against the Russian-built MIG-15.
Four Plane Types Fight Korean War
The Air Force has four types of fighter planes which are the "work horses" of the Korean war.
By PHIL NEWSOM UP Foreign News Editor
The others are the slower F-80 Shooting Star" and the F-84 Thunderjet, and the World War II, propellor-driven Mustang. The Mustang was our most successful fighter in the closing days of World War II, against the jets that has so much chance as a kite in a whirlwind.
The Shooting Star, the Thunder-
jet and the Mustang all are obsolete
even though the former two
overwere heard of at the close
of the last war.
Page 5
Yet, because our Air Force has been fighting a sort of "starvation" war in Korea, all three have been doing a tremendous job as fighters-bombers against enemy troop concentrations and supplies and in close support of our own ground troops.
Until the B-29 medium bombers were limited to night work, the F-84's frequently were assigned to them as escort and downed their share of MIG's. But it was an uneven battle in which, if we won, we did so because our pilots were better trained and were equipped with a better gun sight than the enemy.
As air-to-air fighters, the Shooting Stars and Thunderjets now have been replaced in Korea by the Sabreiet.
Combat figures illustrate that so far as a comparison between the Sabre and the MIG is concerned, the MIG is so much in quality as in numbers.
Their chances of finding a fight are good and they usually are outnumbered at least three to one, and sometimes by as much as eight to one. We have about 150 Sabrejets in Korea as opposed, according to latest official estimates, to about 700 MIG's available to the Reds.
The F-88 boys are the ones who
the F-88 boys are the ones who
the morning for the BIG Allex,pgfR
Yet, with the odds against them, our pilots have been killing off the MIG'S at about the rate of eight to one.
He got back to fly again. But up to the last official figure, 21 Sabres had been lost, and usually numbers were the reason.
"Come on up here, you guys. I got 15 of 'em surrounded."
a few seconds later came this call,
you guys, hurry up. Now they go.
Wait, the prompt says "Preserve special characters and punctuation exactly as they appear."
So no spaces or special characters.
But, for the man alone in the sky, cruising along at 30,000 feet, those odds cannot be discounted. I talked with some Sabre pilots one day, just as they climbed from their planes after the first great air battle of the war. They told me this story about one of their number during the peak of the fight. He called over his radio:
Unofficial estimates say that Russia has outbuilt us three to one since 1846.
University Daily Kansan
the University's third major production is a new play by a contemporary author. It has no traditions and, as a result, the biggest problem in directing is the interpretation of Fry's words.
He said a woman who saw the London production of the play summed up the story plainly and imaginatively by saying, "It is the story of what it is to die and a woman who wants to live—and of course the woman wins."
Mr. Rea said as a director, a person has to have a common objective upon which he and his actors agree. "We decide where we're going," he said, "and interpret how each character feels and fits into the story. The play takes on new meaning each day.
"I am convinced," he continued. "that above all, this play is first and foremost a romantic comedy."
"I feel we must approach Fry sincerely and with intelligence," he said, adding, "His plays are a wonderful exercise for the educational theater. They give actors practice in voice characterization as well as handling of a tough acting assignment."
"However," he added, "the fact that the words of this play are in conversational blank verse, makes them easier to express than they would be otherwise."
Mr. Rhea said that the closer his relationship comes to the play, the more his ideas and interpretations of the play change.
"This is proving a wonderful testing ground for me," he said. "The final decision as to what is right and wrong in the play's presentation is mine."
"The Lady's Not For Burning," released last month for amateur presentation, will be given Feb. 27 through March 1.
Low bid for construction of a transmitter house for the new University AM radio station was sub-construction company of Lawrence.
Green Submits Low Bid
The successful bidder will have 90 days in which to complete the concrete block building near the 510 foot radio and television tower after the contract is awarded.
Human Blood Holds Totem Pole Together
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
The "Yermerlindi" and the other objects in the collection were gathered by an international expedition to Arnhem Land on the northern coast of Australia.
Washington—(U.P.)—Human blood is used as glue on a toot pole made by Australian aborigines that is part of a collection on display at the Smithsonian institution.
The totem pole, called the "Vermerlindi," is eight feet high and made from a bundle of saplings covered by paper bark. The bark is coated with human blood which acts as an adhesive to glue an outer covering of wild bush cotton to the pole.
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Theater Lab To Give Three Plays Today
Three lab theater plays will be given at 8 p.m. today in the Little Theater in the basement of Green hall. Season tickets will admit.
Lord Dunsany, author of the third play, is one of the most famous Irish poets and playwrights. He was active in the Abbey theater in Dublin, Ireland, 50 years ago.
The plays are "Heavens" by Russel Culver, "26, "At the Shrine" by Stark Young, and "Fame and the Poet" by Lord Dunsany.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
United States Behind Germany In Bobsled Race
Oslo, Norway—(U.P.)-The No. 1 United States team finished second behind Germany today in the first heat of the four-man bobsled competition of the winter Olympic games. A hot sun threatened to cancel tomorrow's scheduled windup of the event.
The no. 1 U. S. team, steered by Stan Benham of Lake Placid, N. Y., shot down the 1,500-meter (nearly one-mile) Frognersetron course in one minute, 17:44 seconds on a rapidly softening track. The Germans were tined in a superior 1:16:36.
With temperature at 39 degrees Fahrenheit, the ice was melting rapidly and Norwegian officials felt that the four-man bobsled race might not be completed.
The two-day bobsled competition involving 15 teams from nine nations began under a hot sun that threatened to destroy the Frogersetern course within a few hours.
"The course is terrible," said an Olympic official. "It's in danger of being completely destroyed within hours by the sun. This may be the only event of the Olympics which we will not be able to finish.
Besides Benham, the U. S. sled was made up of Pat Martin of Massena, N. Y.; Howard Crosset of Bradford, N. Y., and Jim Atkinson of Hamilton, N. Y.
The U. S. won the Olympic four-man bobsled championship in 1948 and was a strong favorite to repeat.
America's no. 2, sled, steered by Jim Bickford of Saranac Lake, N. Y., completed its first heat in 1:19:31 and was in eight place. Hubert Miller of Saranac Lake, Dick Severino of Saratoga Springs, N. Y., and Joe Scott of Ausable Falls, N. Y., were the other members of the sled.
At the completion of the first heat, the temperature had risen to 43 degrees and officials ordered a delay
Belmont Stakes Set For June 7
New York — (U.P.) The 84th renewal of the mile-and-a-half Belmont Stakes, the last and longest of America's triple crown races, will be held June 7, the Westchester Racing association announced today.
The $100,000 Belmont, a grueling test for three-year-old colts and fillies at weight for age, often is called "the test of the champion" and is a favorite target for the nation's thoroughbred owners and breeders.
The first two triple crown races—the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs and the Preakness at Pimlico—are scheduled May 3 and 17, respectively.
to repair the track and eliminate excessive hazards.
The crack German sied was made up of Andreas Ostler and Lorenz Nieberl, who won the two-man championship, and Fritz Kuhn and Franz Kemser.
Dick Button of Englewood, N. J., was favored to win the U. S. its fourth Olympic gold medal in the windup of the men's figure skating competition later in the day.
Button, 21-year-old Harvard university senior, held a commanding lead at the start of today's competition and only a major disaster could untie him from successfully defending the crown that he won in 1948.
The United States, which surged back into second place yesterday on the strength of Mrs. Andrea Mead Lawrence's slalom victory and a fine showing in ladies' figure skating, figured to gain additional points in men's figure skating from Jimmy Grogan of Colorado Springs, Colo., who was in third place at today's start, and Hayes Jenkins of Akron, O., who stood fifth.
The U. S. hockey team, unbeaten in four games but much criticized because of what Europeans consider "rough" play, faces its sternest test so far against Sweden, also unbeaten. The third unbeaten team, Canada, plays Switzerland while inland meets Czechoslovakia and Norway plays Germany.
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CITIES SERVICE
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Phone 4
Downtown—Near Everything
KU 'B' Squad Defeats Mules
The Kansas "B" basketball squad had too much power for the Warriorsburg Mules' reserves, as Coach Dick Harp's squad turned in a 55-43 victory, in a contest played in Auditorium Wednesday.
The Jayhawkers used a good fast break, which was too much for the Mules defense.
Larry Davenport led the scoring for Kansas with 16 points, with seven from the field and two points at the line. Jerry Alberts was second high for the Jayhawkers with five shots from the field.
Cage Scores
Warrensburg (43) . . . G FT F
Lenox 3 4 3
Pruitt 0 1 0
Gregory 5 2 0
Simmerman 0 0 1
Schromn 5 0 5
McCraary 0 0 1
Bure 1 1 1
French 3 0 1
Parker 0 1 2
Greer 0 0 2
Totals 17 9 16
Kansas "B" (55) G FT F
Forsythe 0 0 0
Buller 1 0 2
Davenport 7 2 2
Franklin 0 0 0
Dye 2 3 1
Guess .0 0 1
Albert .5 0 4
Whitney .1 1 1
Nicholson .0 0 1
Wolfe .0 0 0
Johnson .4 1 5
Bogue .1 0 1
Squires .0 0 0
A. Kelley .1 0 4
Smith .1 0 2
Anderson .0 1 0
Padgett .0 1 0
Totals ... 23 9 24
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24
A M B C A L E A N T I N G A N D S P O R T E D A Y
MEN'S I-M CHAMPS—Beta Theta Pi won the men's 'A' intramural basketball championship last night as they defeated Dark Horses 36-34. Front row (left to right) Jim Floyd, Jerry Brownlee, Don Woodson, Ralph Moon, Hal Cleavinger. Back row John Strawn (coach), Mark Rivard, Ned Wilson, Bob Reed, Wally Altman.—Kansas photo by Jim Murray
Beta Theta Pi Wins Basketball Crown
Bv BOB WOHLMAN
Beta Theta Pi won the "A" division Hill championship last night with a hard-fought, 38-34, victory over the Dark Horses.
A set-shot by Bill Altman with less than three minutes to play broke a 34-34 tie and gave Beta its margin of victory.
The Dark Horses held a slim lead throughout most of the game. Beta led 8-7 at the quarter, but theDark Horses came back to take the lead on successive baskets by Kennard, Murphy and Williams.
During the third quarter, the Dark Horses led all the way, but Beta closed the gap to 31-30. Jerry Brownlee tipped in a basket to give Beta a 32-31 lead in the opening minutes of the final quarter.
Pat Wilson hit a free throw to tie the score at 32 each, and then Riley Woodson scored for Beta. Bud Laughlin and Odd Williams each sank a charity toss to tie the score again.
Beta led all the way in wrapping up the division cup. They led 13-3 at the end of the first quarter and held AFROTC for five minutes before the service team could score a field goal. Beta held a 20-6 lead at the half, and 35-17 entering the final quarter.
Beta Theta Pi also took the "B" division Hill championship with an easy 48-25 victory over AFROTC.
Alman scored for Beta, and when the Dark Horses traveled with the ball, Beta took over and stalled until time ran out.
AFROTC was able to score on only six field goals, but made good on free throws. Beta made 18 from the field and 12 out of 22 from the field.
Meta's Dick Docking was the game's high scorer with 18 points, followed by Bob Dare's 11.
Varsity House won the "C" division championship with a 38-29 victory over Phi Gamma Delta.
Curtis Debay scored 10 points to lead the scoring for Varsity House, while Heywood Davis was top scorer for Phi Gamma with 13.
New York—(U.P.)-The slick St. Louis university Billikens now became the second team to qualify for the NCAA basketball tournament.
The Bills, currently ranked as the No. 8 team in the nation by the United Press board of coaches, gained the tournament berth when they clinched the Missouri Valley Conference championship last night at St. Louis by defeating Houston, 63 to 55.
Bills Ready For NCAA
St. Louis's first round opponent in the Western Regionals of the NCAA tournament at Kansas City, March 2, lost to Miami to undefeated champion of the Border Conference.
Of the other 15 NCAA berths, the only one already clinched is that belonging to the Southeastern Conference champion, which is Kentucky. The National Invitation Tournament has filled three of its 12 berths with Duquesne, St. John's, and St. Bonaventure.
Six-foot, five-inch Bob Koch led St. Louis to its clinching triumph as he sank 23 points, 15 of them in the second half.
Dayton U., ranked No. 14 nationally and a leading candidate for both NIT and NCAA bids, furthered its cause with a 65 to 56 victory over Miami of Ohio. It was the Flyers' 22nd victory against only two losses and their 13th straight since losing to St. John's.
Discontinued lines of WINSOR NEWTON and DELTZ Red Sable and Bristle Brushes
Sale of Artist Brushes
Save 20%
Carter's Stationery
1025 Mass. Phone 1051
The senior "A" team defeated the freshman team 47-27, as the accurate shooting of the senior forwards was too much for the opposition.
I-M Class Games Start For Women
The women's intramural basketball class games began Wednesday in Robinson gym, with the senior "A" and sophomore "A" squads gaining impressive victories.
The sophomore "A" team defeated the juniors, 39 to 14. Mary Ann Mahoney continued her high scoring pace with 24 points. Garrett was second for the sophomores with 8 points.
Shirley Mickelson, Barbara Quinn and Ernesty Dehlinger, the senior forwards are all members of last year's varsity. Dehlinger scored 24 points, Quinn had 13 and Mickelson scored 10.
Joyce Jones led the junior scoring
half with 15 points and had 8
and Marian Miller scored 6.
For the freshmen, Mary Demerritt scored 17, Shirley Smith had 3, and Flavia Robertson scored 7.
The sophomore "B" *bus* defeated the junior team with a 37 to 31 victory. Joan Carter led the sophomore scoring with 13 points. Luella Schmalzried and Betty Muir each had 12.
Jackie Jones scored 18 points for the juniors, Allie Grove had 6 and Esther Harms also had 6.
Mary Snead led the freshman scoring with 21 points, Carolyn Zimmerman had 14 and Marjorie Godwin scored 4.
The freshman "B" team defeated the senior team, 42 to 27. The seniors were hampered by having to play freshmen played outstanding ball.
Chloe Warner scored 13 points for the seniors, Marianne Crosby scored 8 and Judy Buckley had 6.
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952 University Daily Kansan I
Villanova 93, Xavier (Ohio) 74
Pennsylvania 54, Penn State 52
Scranton 91, Albright 76
Amherst 73, Brown 45
Syracuse 98, Army 64
Brandeis 68, American Int. 65
Brooklyn Col. 74, Cooper Union 55
Franklin & Mar. 103, Bucknell 86
Cockport stock 0, Oswego 50
Lincoln 115, Kings 73
Alfred 67, Ithaca 58
Middlebury 44, Norwich 42
Bloomings 83, Wilkes 66
Cage Scores
WANT CURB SERVICE? THEN THE CHATEAU'S THE PLACE TO GO
At the CHATEAU you get tempting sandwiches and fountain drinks served right to your car, every day after 4 p.m., any day of the year.
CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MASS. AT 18TH ST.
No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money.
A&P Super Market
A&P
GOOD FOODS FOR QUICK MEALS
With Cheese 2 For
KRAFT - DINNER 25c
Cold Stream 1 lb. can
PINK SALMON 49c
Van Camp's — Ready to serve 300 can
SPANISH RICE 2 for 35c
Ann Page—with tomato sauce No. 2 can
SPAGHETTI 2 for 35c
CHILI CON CARNE 29c
Banquet—ready to serve 6 oz. can BONED CHICKEN 48c
Country — new low price Doz.
FRESH EGGS 33c
Whole Sun — makes 1½ pt. 6 oz. can ORANGE JUICE 2 for 25c
These prices good through Sat. Feb. 23, 1952
Unusual
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VALUES
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Finely tailored of 100% wool fabrics. Colors for right now and for wear all spring. Stop in and see them.
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A large assortment of gabardines, flannels and worsteds in rayon, rayon and wool and all wool fabrics. Alterations free.
$6.95 to $15.95
Gibbs Clothing Company
811 Mass. St.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Brotherhood Group To Hear Chancellor
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will be the featured speaker at the annual Brotherhood dinner of the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy.
Brotherhood week has been established nationally through the direction of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. This group asks adherents to be佣 sponsor by the LLPD to be in agreement with its policy.
The dinner will be given Tuesday, Feb. 26 at the Congregational Parish house, 925 Vermont street.
In addition to Dr. Murphy the program will include songs by Curtis Glover, graduate student in musical education; P. N. Varulhege, graduate student from India, and a student from Haskell Institute.
Tickets cost one dollar apiece and can be obtained from J. S. Daniels, 222 west 9th street.
Thursday. Feb. 21, 1952
Today's Recipe Is Swedish Rye Bread
Swedish rye bread is a favorite with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald M. Carney. Mr. Carney is an associate professor of music education.
Swedish Rye Bread
1 qua t ooing water.
2 teaspoon anise seed.
3 cups rye flour.
4 teaspoons salt.
5 cups sugar.
6 tablespoon shortening.
7 tablespoons butter.
8 yeast cake.
9 can dark molasses.
Pour boiling water in a large bowl and add anise seed. Add shortening and let stand until tepid. Add rye flour, sugar, salt and yeast. Beat thoroughly. Cover bowl and let stand overnight. Add white flour gradually, kneading until dough is stiff and thick. Let rise for about five hours. Make into loaves and let rise one hour more. Bake at 400 degrees about one hour. Makes about live medium loaves.
Kappa.Sigma Elects Officers;
Tom Church Is Grand Scribe
Tom Church. College sophomore,
scribe of *Sigma Sigma*, featernity.
Other officers include Walt Rickel,
assistant grand scribe; Don Ochs,
grand treasurer; Stephen O'Brien,
assistant grand treasurer, and John
Calvin, and James Jackson, guards.
Delta Chi Pledges Two Men
Delta Chi fraternity announces the pledging of Robert Howery, fine arts freshman from Kansas City, Mo., and James Milligan, College freshman from Tucson, Ariz.
Foster Hall Hour Dance
Foster hall entertained with an open hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at Foster hall. Mrs. Sone Wenzel, housemother, was he chaperone.
Delta Tau Delta To Serenade Members of Delta Tau Delta fraternity will serenade North College all from 10:45 to 11:05 p.m. Thursday.
Sigma Kappa-Accacia Dance
Sigma Kappa sorority will enter
Acacia fraternity with a dessert
dance from 7 to 8 p.m. Thursday at
the chapter house. The chaperones
will be Mrs. Mary Younkman,
housemother, and Mrs. Chancey L.
Veatch.
DU-Kappa Hour Dance
Delta Upson fraternity will entertain Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority with an hour dance from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the chapter room. The sororities will be Mrs. James A. Hooke, housemother, and Mrs. Edwin B. Peet.
PHOTOS COPIED
wallet or application size photos
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deluxe print $1.00
original picture returned send any size photo or negative
FEDERAL WALLET SIZE PHOTO CO.
negative
Sophomore representatives meeting, 7:30 tonight, AWS lounge. Unrepresented organized houses are asked to send representatives. Sophomore independents-at-large welcome.
Official Bulletin
Lutheran Student association, 6 pm. Sunday, cost supper. Rev. C. J. Naugle. "Here Am I."
Christian Science organization, tonight. Danforth chapel.
Phi Chi Theta, 7:30 tonight, 110 Strong.
Faculty Forum meeting, Monday noon, Faculty club. Dr. Davidson,
"Types of Research Being Done at the University."
p. o. box 2448, Kansas City 6, Mo.
inter-Varsity Christian fellowship, 7:30 tonight, 206 Strong, Dick Grav, Topeka, speaker.
Tryouts for "College Daze" will be held Feb. 25, 26 and 27 in Military Science bldg.
All Student Council meeting, 7:30 onight. 106 Strong.
Alpha Kappa Psi, 7:15 tonight,
Strong annex F-3.
IVCF missionary meeting, 12 noon-12:50 Friday, Danforth chapel, all welcome.
KuKu's, 7:15 tonight, 105 Green, important.
Sigma Kappa sorority held an informal record-party Friday in observance of Valentine's day.
Home Ec club, 4 today, Dining room of Fraser hall, Dean Lawson will speak.
Openings for editor and business manager for K-Book, K-Calendar and Student Directory, written applications to be submitted to Bill Stinson, dean of men's office, deadline March 1. Contact Bill Stinson
Sigma Kappa Lists Valentine Party Guests
The Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Faust, Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Strait and Mrs. Mary Youngkm.
Mike Wells, John Coffman, Bob Hantla, Dean Kelly, Cal Engleman, Royce Ferguson, Max Zimmerman, Walt Calvert, Bantista Murilla, Sam Wilcoxon, Clancy Chambers, Jerry Weber and Martin Ellenberger.
The guests were David Bell, Earl Smith, Barney Pool, Bill Daugherty, John McCullough, Bill Rives, Harry Newby, Andrew Murry, Richard Walker and George Fraser.
Hans Winder, Ela Graser, Klaus Wrede, Andree Drouart, Christian Kind, Janine Becq, Gerard Bourez, Glenna Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mason.
17 Men Initiated Into Kappa Sigma
Seventeen men were initiated into Gamma Omicron chapter of Kappa Sigma fraternity at a ceremony Sunday.
The men are: Marvin Carter, Wichita; Cecil Witt, Russell; Dallas Chestnut, Clay Center; William Brown, Keokuk, Iowa; Jean Schanze, Leavenworth; Joseph P. Cox, Lyons; George "Stopepew尔滞, Russell; Bernard Rooney, Dodge City; and Alfred S. Little, Kansas City, Kan
William H. McEachen, Prairie Village; Rodney Swain, Dodge City; Tom Wilson, Russell; John Calvin, Osborne; Myers Kan, Westboro; Westboro, Independence, Mo.; Bill Sheetz, Norton, and Ken Yunker, Kansas City, Mo.
Engineering Fraternity Initiates 9 Men
The men are Joe Engle, engineering sophomore, Chapman; Jim Simmons, engineering sophomore, Lawrence; Glenn Foster, engineering junior, Kansas City, Mo.; Dennis Vernon, engineering junior, Kansas City, Kan., and George Holyfield, engineering junior, Piper.
Five men were formally initiated Sunday in Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity.
International club, 8 p.m. Friday,
Hawk's Nest platform. Dance party,
bring any musical records from your
country. All welcome.
for details.
WYCA all-membership meeting,
4 WYCA board members. Topic:
"Invest, Yourself."
Psychology club, 7:30 tonight, 9. Strong. Dr. Henry David, psychologist and Dr. Paul Toussieng, psychologist. Topeka State hospital, speakers
KU Mountaineering club, 7:30 tonight. 402 Lindley.
Deutscher Verein, Donnerstag 5 p.m., 502 Fraser. Es singt Dale Moor, am keavier Martha Heck.
Gamma Delta cost supper, 5:30 Sunday. Topic, "The Augsburg Confession."
Danforth chapel worship service, 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Everyone welcome.
EYE
YOUR EYES
Eye
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
The Department of Speech and Drama
Presents
A Romantic Comedy by Christopher Fry
The Lady's Not For Burning
FRASER THEATER
WED., THURS., FRI., SAT.
Feb. 27, 28, 29, March 1
I-D CARDS ADMIT
Present I-D Card for Reserved Seat
TICKET OFFICE - GREEN HALL
Open Daily 9-12 a.m. — 1-4 p.m.
Brinse
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
CUT DOWN FOOD BILLS TO BUDGET SIZE
Advertisers Exchange Inc. 1932
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MENU
Values Galore
Fine Beet
SUGAR 10 lb. bag 89c
Flemings Flavor Rich
COFFEE lb can 79c
Good Value colored quarters
OLEO lb. 19c
Hunt's Halves No. 21/2 can
PEACHES 25c
Light Meat Graded 6½ oz. can
TUNA 19c
I
Self-Service Meats
Armour's Star
PICNIC HAMS ___ lb. 35c
Banner
SLAB BACON ___ lb. 39c
U.S. Choice Chuck
BEEF ROAST ___ lb. 69c
Our butchers' home-made
SAUSAGE ___ lb. 35c
Wisc. Longhorn
CHEESE ___ lb. 59c
Cello
WHITING FISH ___ lb. 22c
Fruits & Vegetables
Red Ripe Slicing 1 lb. tubes
TOMATOES 2 for 29c
Calif. Iceberg large heads
LETTUCE 2 for 19c
Crisp, tender large bunches
RADISHES 2 for 11c
Seedless Juicy --- 96's
GRAPEFRUIT 10 for 49c
Snow Crop, Frozen 6 oz. cans
ORANGE JUICE 2 for 35c
RUSTY'S Food Center 23RD & LOUISIANA OPEN EWINGS AND SUNDAYS COLE'S Food Center 2ND and LINCOLN LOW PRICES EVERYDAY PARKING SPACE EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
$50 Million Industry Brings Wealth To Many In South
Jackson, Miss.—(U.P.)—Few persons think of Mississippi as an on state.
However, in the short 12 and a half years since the discovery of the first well in Mississippi, the industry has grown to a $50,000,000 a year business. In addition, 5,000 residents of this "poor state" are employed directly in the oil and gas industry.
Court Told Of Practical Jokes
San Rafael, Calif. — (U.P.)—The "humorless Dennises," alternate victims of a booby-trapped toilet seat and a hoax bomb, once had their home besieged by a fully-armed riot squads of military and civilian police, court testimony showed today.
The colonel retaliated by tossing a ticking mechanism under her bed, yelling "Bomb!" and then howling with laughter when she ran frantically out of the house.
The case of Mrs. Dorothy Dennis, 50, vs. Col. Ira Dennis (Ret.) attracted attention recently when Mrs. Dennis testified she once booby-trapped a toilet seat to explode under her husband "as a sort of joke."
Both have accused the other of possessing no "sense of humor."
Yesterday Maj. John C. Ivey, former provost marshall at Sixth Army headquarters, testified by affidavit that on the night of Dec. 1, 1950 he was alerted by Sausalito police that Dennis had barricaded himself in his home and was threatening to shoot his wife.
Ivey set forth post haste—accompanied by one colonel, one major, one captain, one sergeant, one corporal, several privates, two military sedans and an ambulance.
The squad carried gas masks, riot guns. .45 caliber pistols and tear gas grenades.
Upon arrival at the colonel's home, Ivey's affidavit said, the army men found a big roving force of civilian police "running around with drawn weapons."
After studying the situation 20 minutes and receiving a report that Dennis was inside the house brandishing a high-caliber rifle, Ivey and his men steeled themselves and went in after the colonel, and they found him—sleeping soundly in bed in paiamas.
An affidavit taken at the time from Mrs. Dennis and introduced as testimony said it was she who had sent out the distress call after the colonel kicked her, swore at her and beat on the locked door of her bedroom until his blows bent the lock bolt. Then he apparently went to bed. she said.
Dennis testified that he had been subjected to intense humiliation by being placed under psychiatric observation at an army hospital as a result of the episode.
Ushers Needed For Plays
Nancy Morsbach, college sophomore, requests anyone who can usher for either "The Lady's Not for Burning" or the lab theater plays to contact her immediately at 415.
1950年12月27日,党中央、中央军委在北京举行的全国人民会议第二次大会上通过《关于建立中国人民解放军预备役军种的决议》,决定成立中国人民解放军预备役军种。
RED MAEDCHEN — These two North Korean girls are members of the Communist party that accompanies the Red truce delegation to talks with the United Nations mediators at Pamunjom, North Korea. One at right is an army nurse.
The thing which sent farmers on worn-out land and small town dreamers alike to dancing delirious jigs began in 1939 when a college geology student persuaded drillers to test an area he had marked out.
They earn more than $15,000,000 a year. The industry has four processing plants at Yazoo City, Laurel, Brookhaven and Natchez.
Mississippi had had producing gas wells before but the first producing oil well was brought in on Aug. 29, 1939. There followed a wild scramble for oil leases and at one time in 1940 there were as many as 68 geophysical crews in the state in one month. In less than four months the acreage under lease was doubled to 7,000,000 acres.
Then, with a rapid decline in the number of producers brought in, the industry sobered up and settled down to systematic exploration. The years 1941 and 1942 were discouraging but in 1943 the jinx was broken.
The Brookhaven field was discovered in March of that year and that precipitated the discovery of field after field until in 1944, 72 wildcats were drilled and nine new fields were discovered—a record of only eight wildcats for each new field.
Today, more than 80 independent operators and 18 major companies are active in Mississippi and the state contains more than 1,600 producing wells. In 1950, 38,230,695 bars of oil were produced in addition to immense quantities of natural gas.
Another trail-blazing project is under way this year, Gulf Refining company's seismic survey of 800,-000 acres in costal waters is expected to be the forerunner to Mississippi's first off-shore well.
The state's legislators already are talking about new roads and schools which they hope to pay for from revenue which would come from the off-shore field.
Dean George B. Smith, of the School of Education, will attend the fourth annual meeting of the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education in Chicago today through Saturday.
Smith To Attend Meeting
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
The drug has a technical name of some 20 syllables, but its developers, scientists, of Smith, Kline & French, Philadelphia, call it "aptrol" for short.
HUMAN DEFENSE AGENCY
Drs. Gelvin and McGavick have reported that the patients first administered the appetite killing drug were attending the obesity clinic at Welfare Island. Overweight persons with diabetes or those with heart conditions were not used in the trials.
First clinical trials with the new drug have been reported by two New York physicians—Dr. E. Philip Gelvin and Dr. Thomas H. McGavick. The patients treated were at the city's Welfare Island dispensary unit.
BRITISH MYSTERY PLANE—Photographed for first time is the Gloster GA 5, powered by two Armstrong Siddley jets. It is a radar-equipped, all-weather, day and night long-range Delta fighter, claimed by the RAF to be the only plane of its kind. It is better qualified than any other fighter to destroy atom bombers. Its speed, range, armament and radar gear are secret. Its unusual shape answers a design problem for aircraft traveling at sonic speeds.
New York—(U.P.)—Medical science today has a new drug that will help you maintain that reducing diet.
Science Offers Dieting Drug
The drug still is in the experimental stage, but preliminary trials indicate that it may have real value as an appetite killer for those fat men and women who try to stay on a 1,000-calorie diet—about 1,000 calories below a normal count.
All told, 65 patients—two males and 63 females-participated in the study.
Significantly, the new compound caused few bad side reactions, a problem encountered heretofore with other appetite killing drugs. Those drugs usually reduced the appetite, but in most cases they caused sickness and discomfort to the patient.
Drs. Gelvin and McGavick, making their official report in the New York State Journal of Medicine, said the study showed that the rate of weight loss was "four times as fast in those receiving aptol as compared with those receiving a placebo."
For That Special Gift
A Beautiful Ring
with distinctive
style and grace
HARRY POTTER
KU Democrats Elect Officers
Balfour's 411 West 14th
Ohio Uses Airplanes To Count Its Deer
The Young Democrats elected Bob Walker, college senior, as president for 1952-33 Monday.
While the U. S. Census Bureau counts the nation's noses each 10 years, the Ohio wildlife division surveys the state's deer population each year, by air.
Cleveland, Ohio —(U.P.)— Taking a census of deer is a much tougher job than counting humans and it's done more frequently, too.
Don Hopson, Martha Ann Truman, third year law; Camilla Klien, Carol Ann Aiken, Bob Walker, and Bernard Rooney, college freshmen, plan to attend an executive council for Young Democrats Saturday in Topeka.
killed. Twelve northeastern Ohio counties have been selected for the 1952 census.
Walker will preside over a cabinet including Dan Hopson, second year law, and Cecil Witt, college freshman, vice-presidents; Carol Ann Aiken, college sophomore, treasurer; Connie McNergay, college sophomore, secretary; and Bill Limesay, first year law, and Carol Ann Aiken, Kansas Collegiate Council representatives.
The state wants to know whether herds are moving, staying in one place, multiplying, dying, or being killed.
The group heard Camilla Klien, national committee woman for the Young Democrats, describe plans for the annual Washington day dance, to be held Friday at the Hotel Javhawk. Topeka
The survey will be made from airplanes flying at about 300 feet.
Architects - Engineers
Draw With Assurance
DIEZGEN
Make your choice from the large selection we have in stock
SEE THEM NOW AT YOUR
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
Mayors' Meeting In Seattle Would Receive Japanese
By RICHARD MONTAGUE
United Press Staff Correspondent
Seattle, Wash.—(U.P.)—Mayor William F. Devin of Seattle is arranging a meeting of Japanese and western American mayors here in 1953 which he hopes will be backed financially by the U.S. State department.
He said the mayor's conference would be a follow-up to the one held in Tokyo last November which he attended with other West Coast municipal leaders.
"I only hope that a mayor's conference here can match the wonderful hospitality we received from the Japanese," Devin said. "I wish I could convey my appreciation of the reception we enjoyed there."
Press clippings and records of the Japan conference will be sent for and forwarded to the State Department as a sort of brief to encourage backing of the proposed 1513 convention, he explained.
"Besides satisfying an eagerness of Japanese civic leaders to learn how we operate our cities, such a conference would help to encourage the use of computers in two nations, which in turn enriches trade," Mayor Devin said.
In commenting on the Tokyo conference, the first of its kind ever held, Devin said he thought great strides were made in our efforts to bring practical democracy to the Japanese.
"Democracy here is strongest at the local level." Mayor Devin said, "and it was fitting that mayors of West Coast cities most vitally interested in our relations with the Orient should exchange viewpoints, methods and experiences with Japanese leaders."
On specific trade problems, the mayor commented that there is a large, tangerine (Japanese orange) market in this country which would welcome a revived import of the Japanese product.
Although importation of the fruit into the United States presently is banned by the Department of Agriculture, Devin said considerable work is being done locally to surmount the obstacle.
Devin also suggested that a joint Japanese - United States commission be appointed to study the tuna fish import problem.
That Teamwork Is What Counts
Cleveland, Ohio—U (J.P.)—Robert J. and William Williams, brothers, have worked out a plan to avoid serving full time for a larceny charge.
Under an agreement with the chief probation officer James Henahan and Judge John W. Hackett, one brother stays in jail and the other is released to work off the fine.
The Williams brothers figured it would take about 177 days in jail at the rate of $3 a day, to wipe out their $331 debt—fines and costs on both.
So, it has been decided that 27-year-old William will drive a truck, under supervision by Henahan, while his 26-year-old brother stays in jail.
One-Man Picket Fails
Woonsocket, R. I.—(U.P.)-Wilfred Boiteau, 55, was fined $5 for standing outside a restaurant of his former employer and urging people not to patronize it.
LAST TIMES TODAY
This great motion picture has just been nominated by the Motion Picture Arts & Sciences' as one of the 5 best pictures of the year!
"DECISION BEFORE DAWN"
Science Resumes 20-Year Struggle
Feature Times: 7:12-9:23
n.m.
Washington — (U.P.)— The latest battle in man's struggle against nature is taking place in Washington.
The battle has been brewing for the last 20 years or so. During that time, Washington buildings have become the roosting places for approximately 14,000 members of the family icteridae or starlings.
These fat little black birds have become a complete nuisance.
Science has come again to the aid of suffering humanity. A "bird-proof" wire has been devised which makes things "hot" for these twittering pests.
The device, described by its inventor as "an electronic system of parallel wires run into areas where birds roost, nest, or congregate," gives the bird a mild "hot foot" when it attempts to pause under an eve, on a ledge or in a cornice.
p. m.
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At various times in the past, the starlings have remained at their perches and emerged victorious over toy balloons filled with gas, volleys of pistol blanks, noisy rat cages, plastic windows and placed on window ledges, gas attacks and rattling cans filled with pebbles.
It has been pointed out, however, that these winged residents of Washington have weathered many previous man-made storms.
The idea of booby-trapping the starlings' lodgings has the approval of the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. The wire's shock is not fatal.
Richard M. Bennett, guest lecturer for the department of architecture, left last night after a series of lectures, and consultations with students and faculty.
Chicago Architect Sends Exhibit To KU Department
Mr. Bennett, who is with the firm Loebli, Schlossman and Bennett of Chicago, has sent an exhibit of photos and drawings of the work of his firm which will be on display in 309 Marvin the rest of the week.
1925-1947
Changing Times Hit Frog Leg Industry
NAVAL DEPUTY—British Vice-Admiral Sir William Andrews was named by U.S. Adm. Lynde D. McCormick as deputy commander of the North Atlantic pact naval forces after McCormick was named supreme naval commander.
San Benito, Texas- (U.P.) Changing times have eliminated a depression-born industry of 15 years ago; frog hunting.
Woodrow Wilson, owner of a grocery here, recalls he was one of the first persons to get into the frog business. A lot of folks, unable to find work, took to the canal banks to club frogs. They dressed them and bartered the legs to Wilson for groceries.
Wilson found no local market but soon developed a fair trade in San Antonio, where he shipped as much as 1.000 pounds a week. Wilson, for a time, made more out of the frogs than his store.
When World War II came along, however, many of his best frog hunters were drafted. The women and youth of the town fell down somewhat on the frog front but kept a fair number of legs flowing to Wilson. Prices climbed from 30 cents to $1.10 a pound.
One frog hunter made enough to buy a small farm.
Then things changed. Wholesale hunting, water poisoning from aerial crop-dusting and spraying and the carnivorous gar fish have made the frogs less plentiful. Also, people don't have the time to go frog hunting as they did during the depressure of spring; they are plowed and are unable to stand the fatiguing nocturnal jaunts along the canals looking for croakers.
Comfort! Convenience!
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SPECIAL WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY PREVUE
Friday Night Feb. 22
Box-Office Opens 11:00 p.m.
Also
OPENING SATURDAY FOR AN EXTENDED ENGAGEMENT
English Prelate Warns Malaya Of Red Threat
DEAN JERRY
MARTIN and LEWIS
IN HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION
SAILOR BEWARE
co. starring CORINNE CALVET and MARION MARSHALL
For A Hilarious Good Time Make A Date For FRIDAY NIGHT
No Increase In Admission Children 14c Adults 60c
Sometimes it burs catastrophic violence.
Singapore—(U.P.)-Russian Communism is like a flood.
Sometimes it gradually trickles through.
That observation was made by the Archbishop of York, Dr. Cyril Garbett, who toured the Federation of Malaya and Singapore for 10 days before going on to Australia.
Sometimes it bursts its banks and flows over the country with catastrophic violence. $ \textcircled{*} $
In Malaya, the archbishop said. Communism is adopting the "trickling" method, which means gradual infiltration and a series of acts of violence. By unscrupulous propaganda, it seeks to weaken and intimidate the resistance of the people.
"If the flood breaks in here (Malaya)." Dr. Garbett warned, "it would soon spread over the rest of southeast Asia." He told listeners over Radio Malaya that the people of the country were defending the cause of civilization and thus were doing a service to the rest of the world.
The people of Great Britain and those of Malaya are together in this fight to the end, the archbishop assured his listeners. He warned, again, however, that the date of "inexvitable victory" will depend largely on the wholehearted co-operation of all the nationalities within Malaya. By their refusal to give any help to the terrorists or be intimidated by them they will hasten the day of victory, he said.
Dr. Garbett paid tribute to those who are fighting the Communist campaign of murder and violence in Malaya.
Dr. Garbeff said he felt sure that as those in England began to learn of their (Malayans') courage and of
The troops and police are fighting a foe who is hidden by dense jungle and can take refuge in remote mountains, Dr. Garbett observed, and he can move rapidly from place to place.
the dangers, Britons would feel for them the greatest sympathy.
"This is only one section, though a vital one, of the long front against which the aggressive Communism is throwing its forces," he said. "Korea, Indo-China, Burma and Malaya are all in the same battle lines."
"No quick and dramatic victory is possible," Dr. Garbett said, "but I go away firmly convinced that this unscrupulous foe will be defensel and outwitted."
Although the enemy is not banded in any army, the archbishop said, he is not isolated; he acts under directions issued from secret and well informed headquarters and he is elusive, well trained and utterly unscrupulous.
2 Hospital Staff Members To Address Psychology Club
Two members of the Topeka State hospital staff will speak to the Psychology club at 7:30 p.m. today in 9 Strong hall. Their subject will be "Clinical Psychological Functions, Ethics, and Teamwork in a Hospital Situation."
The speakers are Dr. Henry P. David, senior clinical psychologist and Paul Toussieng, resident psychiatrist from Denmark.
"GANGWAY!"
For the greatest gang of guys
who ever gave you their hearts...
as they broke the back of Heartbreak Hill!
FIXED BAYONETS!
Richard Basehart
Gene Evans · Michael O'Shea
RICHARD HYLTON · CRAIG HILL
SKIP HOMEIER
Produced by JULES BUCK
Directed by SAMUEL FULLER
Screen Play by SAMUEL FULLER
Suggested by a Novel
by John Brophy
20th CENTURY-FOX
STARTING SATURDAY
OWL SHOW 11:15 – SUNDAY
Granada
GANGWAY! For the greatest gang of guys who ever gave you their hearts... as they broke the back of Heartbreak Hill!
Granada PHONE 946
Page 11
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feel for
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fighting jungle remote observed, in place
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adder di-
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"but I
not this
fearful
ers Club
a State
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way in 9
will be
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TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on domestic or international flights. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach, and round trip reductions. All expense courses. Fair for American cruises. Book now for European cruise. Call Miss Gleesner at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
FOR RENT
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Second floor, next to bath; new sink
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TODAY Again Friday
Sizzling Syncopated Romance of the Air Lanes!
GINNY SIMMS
TOM DRAKE
JANE NIGH
MICHAFL O'SHEA
Disc Jockey
Featuring RUSS MORGAN
TOMMY SARAH
DORSEY VAUGHAN
HERB THE WEAVERS
JEFFRIES GEORGE SHEARING
ON OUR STAGE
TONIGHT ONLY
8:45 p.m.
ADELANE'S
presents
VACATION:
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SPRING and SUMMER
FASHION SHOW
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Last Time Tonite
"STRANGE BARGAIN"
"ALONG THE GREAT DIVIDE"
Friday and Saturday Whip Wilson "LAWLESS COWBOYS" and John Howard
"EXPERIMENT ALCATRAZ"
Ch. 2 "Roar of The Iron Horse"
ROOMS FOR BOYS, one single room,
two doubles and four double rooms.
Phone Number 30680W. ZT
GRADUATE STUDENT wants young woman to share three room apartment near campus. Call 2519R evenings. 25
RENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new semester with higher grades. Only students in grade $1.50 per month are portable and standard machines. 22 Union Book Store.
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
BUSINESS SERVICE
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. Ceeche, 88 Lm La. 4 upstairs. Ph. 275J.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am.
until midnight.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tt
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment. Our equipment is fast, efficient service. Bowman Television. Phone 138: 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
BARRON HOLLIS
HELD OVER Thru SATURDAY Lawrence Demands 7 Big Days!
THE GREATNESS, THE GLORY, THE FURY OF THE NORTHWEST FRONTIER!
Universal International presents
JAMES STEWART
ARTHUR KENNEDY
JULIA ADAMS
ROCK HUDSON
BEND OF
THE RIVER
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, maltes, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. Call (314) 276-8000 or a.m. tmr. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 699 Vt.
Universal-International presents
JAMES STEWART
ARTHUR KENNEDY
JULIA ADAMS
ROCK HUDSON
BEND OF
THE RIVER
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
IAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a present surprise and visit your "Jayawk" set shop. We have everything in the pet their needs are our business. Our one-step process includes fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tf
FOR SALE
COCKER PUPPIES. Registered. 10-weeks old. Parti-colored. Weaned and just right for training. Mrs. E. ALEXander, 345 Mississippi, p. 1183M. 21
Continuous Shows Saturday From 1 p.m.-Open 12:45 Also Color Cartoon - News
ROYAL QUIET deluxe portable type-
ter with internal CD player. Jack Folsom, 984, or see at 1050 Ohio, 222.
DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelican Graphos instruments are here. For drawing, lettering and sketching, Get your your Student Union Book Store. 22
Special rates to Students on subscriptions to TIME, LIFE, AND NEWSKEW magazines. Order yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 22
NOTE "Tight Little Island" will be shown at a later date. Granada PHONE 946
Have your FOUNTAIN PEN REPAIRED
Student Union Book Store. Repair work
Student Union Book Store.
New shipment of POCKET BOOKS Just them at the Student Union Box 22 Store.
Granada
PHONE 946
Thursday, Feb. 21, 1952
SILVER-MESH evening purse lost in vicinity of Community building, or in front of Watkins hall, Friday night. Reward. Call Virginia England at 900. 21
LOST
Cherry Tree Legend Was Told First By A Distant Relative
Bv SHIRLEY LYON
Probably you've heard the story of young George Washington and the cherry tree since you were in grade school.
The story is almost synonymous with the name George Washington and one thoughts turn toward machine and cherry trees every year about Feb. 22.
The story was first told in a book called "The Life of George Washington," written by M. L. Weems, rector of the Mount Vernon parish.
An elderly lady who was a distant relative and spent a great deal of her time with the Washington family
LEATHER PERFEX camera cover.
Phone 2569. Ask for Marion Roesler. 22
BLUE PLASTIC bilbillock containing identification, driver's license, and $16.00. If found keep the money, but return the kitty Edwards, 420 West 11th Phone 860. 12
WANTED
WANTED: Typing to do at home. Please
want to help: 1. Barbara 3. Lawrence
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BOY TO BUS dishes 12:30 to 1:30 for
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when she was a girl told Weems the story and he quaintly related it in his book as it was told to him.
The distant relative said the young George's father did much to instil the qualities of truthfulness in his son. "Truth, George," h father had told him, "is the love liest quality of youth."
When George was about six year old, so goes the story, he was mad the wealthy master of a hatchet an amoral band of gangging everythin that came in his way.
The next morning his father dis covered the tree, of which he wa very proud, but nobody in the hous could tell him anything about it.
One day in the garden where he often amused himself by hackin his mother's pea sticks, he unluckily tried the edge of his hatchet on beautiful English cherry tree which he barked terribly.
Presently George and his hatche made their appearance. "George, said his athlete, do you know who the athlete is doing little cherry tree in the garden"
This was a tough question and George staggered under it for a moment, but quickly recovered him self and looking sweetly at his father, he bravely cried out, "I can't tell a lie, Pa; you know I can't tell a lie. I did it with my hatchet."
Father Washington, as the story goes, was so overjoyed at his son's honesty that he forgot all about punishing him.
Lawrence You Will See The Picture First . . . Sorry K.C., Your're Next!
STARTS FRIDAY
Today... We Promise You'll Enjoy It!...
We guarantee this grand story of today's generation will live and burn brightly in your memories of great screen enjoyments.
.
Bright Victory
Starring
Arthur KENNEDY - Peggy DOW John HUDSON
Arthur Kennedy
Winner of the
Coveted
"Best Actor of 1951"
Award From the
New York Film
Critics
Arthur Kennedy
Nominated By The
Motion Picture Arts
And Sciences For
Best Performance
By An Actor For His
Portrayal In
"Ibright Victory"
NEW PATEE
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Feb. 21, 1952
News Roundup
Communists Riot In Japanese Cities
Tokyo— (U.P.) —More than 10,000 police were mobilized for an emergency alert in Tokyo tonight after co-ordinated Communist riots here and in other cities.
Military police and Japanese news agency reports said that in addition to outbreaks here, the Reds rioted in Osaka, Nagoya, Tottori, Yonago, Hiratsuka, Fujisawai and other cities.
They attacked police and railroad stations at some places. At least 14 policemen were injured in classes. In the suburbs, 500 people were under arrest here and in Osaka.
The riots were co-ordinated to take place between 5 and 6 p.m. on the occasion of a Red "anti-colonization" day to protest against United States-Japan negotiations for a mutual security pact and the peace policies of the Japanese government now being debated in Parliament.
Transit Strike Results In 'Jam'
San Francisco—(U.P.) —Residents climbed into their automobiles and pushed their way into "the greatest traffic jam in San Francisco history" today as a strike of city transit employees went into it's second day with no indication of a compromise.
At a meeting Wednesday night, members of the AFL Carmen's union voted unanimously to "carry the strike to a successful conclusion," according to Union International Representative Henry Mann
The decision forced approximately 230,000 persons who daily use the municipal railway service to seek help or walk to work for the second day.
The big walkout came after Mayor Elmer E. Robinson issued an ultimatum to 91 workers on the seven-mile-long Powell street cable carline, who walked off their jobs Sunday in protest of schedules which forced six workers to spread their work day over a period of 11 hours
New Storm Lashes Faithful Seamen
Boston—(U,P)—A new Northeast storm bore down today on the 13 "stay put" seamen riding the battered stern of the tanker Fort Mercer, which was split in two during a Nor'easter Monday.
Two tugs had the Mercer in tow but they moved at a crawling pace of three knots and could not outrun the storm.
The stern of the Fort Mercer was taken in tow by two tugs after Coast Guardsmen completed the rescue of 57 other seamen from the Fort Mercer and its 10,000-ton twin bridge. The boat broke in two in Monday's storm. A total of 14 seamen were lost in the double tragedy.
Most of the 13 seamen of the Mercer's stern stayd aboard in an attempt to salvage the ship's machinery, which is in that part of the vessel, and what remained of a cargo of oil.
Armed Forces Cut Would Aid UMT
Washington—(U.P.) —Senate supporters of our military training believed today **an"economy** amendment to trim the size of the armed forces would help push UMT through the House.
The amendment was added by the Senate armed services committee Wednesday in approving the six-month training program for 18-year-olds. It provides that the standing armed forces will cut back semi-annually after UMT pumps 300,000 trainees into the reserves.
The services would be trimmed at the rate of one regular for each three UMT graduates added to the reserves, until the armed forces are down to 2,006,000—a level they would reach five to six years after the cutbacks began.
Nation May Walk During Oil Strike
Denver> (U.P.)—An oil industry spokesman said today that within
three weeks many of the nation's motorists will be "afoot" if 275,000 oil workers make good their threatener strike.
Representatives of the workers announced after a joint co-ordinating meeting Wednesday night that a nationwide strike would be called March 3 to back up the Union's demands for a straight $2 a day wage increase.
For the first time in history, 22 CIO, AFL and independent unions joined in a common effort to force the industry to accept their demands.
The strike-if it comes off—will hit refineries, pipelines, production plants, sales forces and in some instances, chemical plants.
A. B. ROGER
TUNISIAN HEAD—Habib Bourguiba, head of the Tunisian Constitution party, has been arrested and exiled by French authorities. His release has been hinted by the resident general after the general visited the Bey of Tunis to talk
over major issues.
Committee Ends Tax Investigation
San Francisco — (U.P.)—The King congressional committee concluded its investigation of the San Francisco tax scandal today after diagnosing the local internal revenue disease as a political infection derived from an "inept top administration" in Washington.
Rep. Cecil R. King said the corruption in the San Francisco office, which resulted in the firing of tax collector James G. Smyth and the indictment of six tax officials, had been small-scale and petty and involved relatively small losses to the government.
The California Democrat adjourned 15 days of hearings by his House ways and means subcommittee Wednesday with an acid indictment of his own party's "complacency and indifference."
Washington—(U.P.) House Republicans said today they are satisfied with President Truman's assurance that he has made no secret agreement to Britain to send additional American troops anywhere in the world.
Truman Statement Satisfies GOP
Administration officials and Democratic leaders said it was too bad the President was compelled byCircumstances that it may be of great interest to Russia.
Mr. Truman made the no-commitments statement late Wednesday shortly after the House passed a GOP resolution remanding a full vote to approve his meetings with Prime Minister Winston Churchill the past month.
Officials said he spoke out—even though the resolution was not binding on him—because he feared continued silence might deepen the suspicion that he had something to hide.
Garden City—(U,P) -The troubles of Wayne S. Marteney, 40-year-old head of the Garden Grain and Seed company, mounted today.
Marteney Freed On $5,000 Bond
Marteney was free under $5,000 bond on two charges of issuing fraudulent warehouse grain receipts, pending preliminary hearing Mar. 1.
The hearing was delayed when Marteney, haggard but calm, told the District Judge Milward C. Schrader, his lawyer, Logan Gore县 City was undergoing treatment in Colorado and could not represent him.
Testimony at the creditors hearing revealed the firm was short hundreds of thousands of bushels of grain owned by 200 southwest Kansas producers. Its whereabouts remained a mystery after the two-day session.
Marteney had no comment on the latest circumstance of the rapid rise and fall in the 2000 grain con- which wevelled in four years from a small feed store.
Topeka—(U.P.)—Kansas Democrats' biggest powwow in four years this week will be almost pure politics—state and national.
Democrat Meeting To Be Political
The Democrats start gathering in the Kansas capital Friday and reach a climax in their political maneuver, 2000 of the party faithful will attend.
On both days state Democrat leaders will hold caucuses about their plans. Several undoubtedly will challenge the Republican party officeholders in the state. A Democrat and an opponent from several Democrat congressional hopefuls will emerge from the two day session.
Morris Key Man In Tanker Deal
Washington—(U.P.)—Sen. Richard M. Nixon made that Newbold Morris was the "key figure in what appears to be a subterfuge to get around the law" in a profitable surplus tanker deal.
Nixon, a committee member, said evidence presented so far indicates a deliberate attempt to get around the law "which prohibited the transference of rights to controlled corporations." Morris's firm was involved in the deal.
President Truman's government corruption clean-up chief retorted the statement "just isn't so—what more can I say?"
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea — (U.P.) — American Sabrejets shot down MIG-15's today to bring to seven the number of Communist jets destroyed in the past three days.
Sabrejets Down Two More MIGs
On the ground, Communist forces ambushed a United Nations patrol west northwest of Kansung on the front. Force reinforcements trying to come to the aid of the patrol were pinned down by enemy mortar fire.
Enjoying a numerical advantage for a change, 26 F-26 Sabres battled 40 of the Russian-built fighters on northeast of Sinaniu in "MG Allez."
Additional reinforcements arrived an hour and 15 minutes after the ambush was sprung and all UN forces were able to disengage and return to their own lines. Else-forestion on the 04A, with front, there was only probing and patrol action with a platoon the maximum size unit.
Dixiecrats May Be In Race Again
Washington — (U.P.) — A leading Dixie Democrat predicted today that a third party will be formed in the South this year if President Truman
Murphy To Speak At Brotherhood Dinner
Dr. Franklin D. Murphy will be the speaker at the annual Brotherhood dinner of the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy to be held Tuesday, Feb. 26.
The program will also include songs by Curtis Glover, graduate student in musical education, P. N. Varlughese, graduate student from India, and a student from Haskell Institute.
The dinner, which will be held at the Congregational Parish House at 925 Vermont, is being given to honor national Brotherhood Week, established by the National Conference of Christians and Jews. Tickets can be obtained from J. S. Daniels at 222 West 9.
Camps Offering Jobs For Women
Women's summer jobs listed in the dean of women's office include positions as camp counselors in eight states and as clerks, waitresses and other similar job openings in Yellowstone National park.
Girl Scouts, Campfire Girls and Young Men's Christian association camps in Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, Oklahoma, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois and New York are requesting applications for counselors in the next few weeks.
Girl Scout camps include Camp Scott, under the Tulsa, Okla., Girl Scout council; Camp Woodland, St. Joseph, Mo., council; Camp Medill McCormick, Rockford, Ill., council; Camp Turkey Creek, Wichita; Camp Daisy Hindman, Topeka; Camp Oak-ledge, Kansas City, and Camps Laughing, Water, Quidnunc, Andree and Brady, under the New York city council.
and Sen. Robert A. Taft are the major party nominees for president.
On the other hand, he said, there is little chance of a new "Dixiecrat revolt" if President Truman steps aside for some other Democratic candidate, or if Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower is the GOP nominee.
In the latter case, he said, many key Southern Democratic leaders would just "sit on their hands" during the campaign and let matters take their course, in the expectation that Eisenhower would carry at least five or six Southern states.
New Atomic Engines Ordered For Subs
Washington—(U.P.) —The government today ordered "immediate construction" of a new atomic submarine engine of advanced design
The nuclear power plant, to be built by the General Electric company at West Milton, N.Y., will be a land-based pilot model. If successful, it will clear the way for early construction of a sister ship to the U.S.S. Nautilus, the Navy's first atomic submarine, which is due to be launched in 1954.
NATO Approves Armament Plan
Lisbon, Portugal—(U.P.) The defense ministers of the 14-nation North Atlantic treaty organization approved today the military and civilian plans for setting up a 1,430,000-man European army.
In the first major NATO decision, the defense ministers adopted the report of the military committee by agreeing to the plan to create a unified European Army in 14 French. 12 German, 12 Italian and five Benelux divisions by 1954.
Strike Threat Eased At Ordnance Plant
Parsons—(U.P). The threat of a strike at the Kansas Ordnance plant here was eased Wednesday when a tentative agreement between Nato's payload company officials and CIO United Chemical workers was announced.
Maurice Harrigan, president of the Union local, said there would be a membership meeting to ratify the agreement, and until that meeting announcement would be made concerning the terms of the tentative agreement.
The Kansas Ordnance plant is engaged in war production work.
Students Receive High Honors
Thirty-two students in the department of chemistry were honored for their superior work in beginning chemistry courses during the fall semester.
Dr. Calvin A. VanderWerf, acting chairman of the department, said congratulatory letters had been sent the parents of the students, most of them freshmen, who made an "A" in the courses Chemistry 2 or 2E. The courses are identical except that 2E, arranged for engineering students, has one less laboratory period per week.
The department believes its elementary course is sufficiently thorough and challenging that an "A" grade is an achievement worthy of recognition and encouragement, Dr. VanderWerf said.
Those receiving "A" in chemistry 2E are the following engineering freshmen:
Those in chemistry 2 receiving "A" include:
Roger Heiskell, Vernon Dale Schrag, Lewis A. Phillips, Lewis A. Phillips, Lawrence William Taylor Jr., Douglas B. Smith, Edward Freeburg, LeRoy M. Herold, William Winston Deacon, Ludwig A. Smith, Charles P. Peterman and Richard Backman.
Lynn Martin Stewart, George Allen Daniels, Dwight Harwood Harrison, James Francis Duncan, Delbert M. Jones, Robert Lee Terry Marshall Brown, Ben A. Dalton, Robert P. Rannie, James Perkins.
Pharmacy: Ivan W. Watkins, freshman. College: James F. Peterson, sophomore, Roger Youmans, freshman, Carl D. Ambler, sophomore.
Darrell D. Fanestil, freshman,
Charles Schroff, sophomore, Margaret E. Newton, sophomore, John S. Trombold, freshman, Terry V. Carle, freshman, Anthony J. Pitz, freshman, and Charles F. Schafer, freshman.
Reading Clinic Plans Two Classes
These classes will meet Monday, Wednesday, and Friday for six weeks at 9 and 11 a.m. Students may enroll for either hour.
Two reading classes will be started Monday. Feb. 25, to accommodate students who were unable to enroll in the first group classes.
These courses are free and non-credit. No outside preparation is necessary and all materials are furnished.
Students enrolling in these courses will be taught to improve their reading and comprehension in reading. Some of the instructional general methods of effective study.
Interested persons may inquire at the reading clinic 18 Fraser, from 3 to 5 p.m. for complete details of the various reading courses.
YWCA To Meet At 4 p.m. Today
An all-membership YWCA meet ing will be held 4 p.m. today on the second floor of Myers hall.
On the program several students will talk about ways young people may spend their summers in camp counseling, study seminars in government and social services, hosteling trips, study tours of Mexico and Europe and student conferences.
Marine's Bugle Call Traps Communists
Korea — (U,P)—A Marine bugle virtuoso tried luring the Communists to destruction.
At strategic moments, he blared the Chinese call for attack, which brought the enemy running straight into the muzzles of Leathernck guns.
He learned the call, note for oriental note, when his patrol surprised four enemy soldiers, and a red bugler called for aid.
Little Symphony To Perform
Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity, will sponsor a concert by the university. Little symphony Monday, March 4, in Strong auditorium.
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New Journalism Building Dedicated
PARKS COURT
NEW JOURNALISM BUILDING—Today is D-day for the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. The school's new home—the remodeled old Fowler shops—will be dedicated today. Journalism classes formerly were held in the "Shack"—second oldest building on the campus
Dedication Program
FRIDAY
9:20 a.m.—William Allen White foundation lecture on "Newspapers and the Survival of Free Society" by Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, in Hoch auditorium. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, presiding.
Introduction of speaker by John P. Harris, editor of the Hutchinson News-Herald and president of the William Allen White foundation.
11 a.m.—Dedication program in William Allen White memorial reading room, new Journalism building, Dean Burton W. Marvin, presiding.
Presentation of 100-year-old Washington hand press, gift of Ferdinand Volland, Kansas state printer.
Presentation of Albert T. Reid collection of cartoons and other mementos of Mr.Reid's long career as Kansas editor and as a leading American cartoonist, gifts of Mr.Reid.
Presentation of George Matthew Adams collection of William Allen White first editions and books on journalism, gifts of Mr. Adams of New York City, head of George Matthew Adams feature syndicate and long-time friend of Mr. White.
Presentation of portrait of William Allen White, gift of Harry Scherman, president of the Book-of-the-Month club.
Presentation of William Allen White mementos, gifts of W. L. White, son of William Allen White and present editor and publisher of the Emporia Gazette.
1 p.m.—Luncheon at the Crystal room, Eldridge hotel, Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World, presiding
Dedication statement. Dean Marvin.
Remarks by Henry J. Haskell, editor, the Kansas City Star, "The Personal Side of William Allen White."
Remarks, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, University of Kansas. Address, Rolla Clymer, editor, the ElDorado Times, "W. A. White—A Personal Estimate." Introduction by Oscar Stauffer, publisher, the Topeka State Journal.
3. p.m.—Annual meeting, board of the William Allen White foundation. Faculty club.
6 p.m.—Dinner in Crystal room, Eldridge hotel, for Mr. and Mrs. Erwin D. Canham, co-sponsored by Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalistic fraternity for women, and Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity for men.
-
SATURDAY
11 a.m. to noon—Get-together for University of Kansas journalism alumni, Crystal room, Eldridge hotel.
12:15 p.m.—Alumni luncheon in Grill room, Eldridge hotel. Informal program, Dean Marvin, presiding. Remarks by Professors L. N. Flint and Elmer F. Beth.
2 to 5 p.m.—Public open house, new Journalism building.
2:30 to 5 p.m.—Open house for alumni, new Journalism building. SUNDAY
SUNDAY
Daily Kansan
49th Year, No. 95
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
J-School Dedication Begins; Freedom In Crisis-Canham
Freedom today is in the midst of a crisis, and the job of promoting understanding is a task for all, Erwin Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, said at an all-student convocation today.
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
He gave the third annual William $ \textcircled{4} $
He gave the unit the task:
Allen White Memorial address, Mr. Cain's task as keeping people alert to the constant dangers of freedom, helping them to understand existing freedoms, and challenging the status quo.
He said the dangers spring from three causes.
"Our failure to make clear to enough people the importance to them, in their daily lives, of the instruments of freedom.
"The efforts of power-hungry men and regimes to destroy freedom.
"The gap between our words and our deeds, the need for doing our job—as the agents of the people—more effectively and responsibly."
Mr. Canham asserted that we are living at one of the turning-points of human history.
Mr. Canham said the atomic bomb has kept Communist power from spreading farther into the Russian satellite nations. He explained that the United Nations, acting "almost by instinct rather than by rational thought," saved Japan by fighting in Korea.
Mr. Canham described as "the biggest of totalitarianism's big lie" the widely accepted belief that the capitalist world is defending the status quo while communism is dedicated to change.
Germany's complex industrial system might have been destroyed if the United States had not resisted in Berlin and "prepared the nucleus of a western European force," he said.
"We find ourselves today in a situation where the physical strength of the anti-Communist alliance appears to be growing, and where our moral solidarity and sense of community is also growing, but with many setbacks and grave dangers," Mr. Canham said. "We need moral tenacity and steadiness and patience in these days more, perhaps, than anything else. We need to understand and to communicate to others the essential terms of the crisis."
The capitalistic system is not "shackled to the status quo," he said. It is based on the rights of man, "not man as a more selfish anarchistic entity, but man, God's man, as the highest social value in the community—which often means
M. E. C. PARKER
ERWIN D. CANHAM
The three-day dedication program of the remodeled $300,000 building of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information began today.
However, "n newspapers do not own the right of press freedom," he said. "It belongs to the people. Newspapers are merely stewards."
sacrifice of selfish purposes for the good of all."
Mr. Canham admitted that great strides have been taken toward generalizing opportunity and accomplishment in the United States, but said he believes "we have not yet begun to make the case which will save freedom for the people of our nation and of the world."
"More and more leaders in the fight for freedom have realized that the key to survival is the acceptance of social responsibility," he said. "They have acted on that knowledge."
Journalism Fraternity To Initiate Sixteen
Sixteen men will be initiated into Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity at 5:15 p.m. today in the Eldridge hotel.
The initiates will be honored at a banquet following the ceremony. Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, will be guest speaker.
Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, began the program with an address at 9:20 this morning before an all-student convocation in Hoch auditorium.
The actual dedication program of the new building will be at 11 a.m. when Mrs. White reading room of the school Burton W. Marvin of the school will give the dedication statement to 185 special guests.
Dolph Simons, publisher of the Lawrence Journal-World, will preside at the dedication luncheon at 1 p.m. today in the Crystal room of the Eldridge hotel. Henry J. Haskell, editor of the Kansas City Star, will give some remarks on "The Personal Side of William Allen White" at the luncheon.
Rolla Clymer, editor of the El Dorado Times, will give the luncheon address on "W. A. White—A Personal Estimate." He will be introduced by Oscar Stauffer, publisher of the Topeka State Journal.
Mr. Canham will give the address at a dinner at 6 p.m. in the Crystal room. The dinner is sponsored by journalistic fraternity for women, and Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity for men.
Journalism school alumni will meet at an informal "get-together" at 11 a.m. Saturday in the Crystal room. A 12:15 p.m. luncheon in the grill room of the Eldridge hotel will follow the meeting.
Prof. L. N. Flint and Prof. Elmer F. Beth will speak at the luncheon.
Open house for alumni at the new journalism building will be from 2:30 p.m. Saturday. Submit open house will be from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday.
The Kansas legislature first provided for the remodeling of the Fowler Shops into the new journalism building in 1945 with a $150,000 appropriation. In 1947, $150,000 more was voted.
Faculty and students first moved to the new school January 25.
KFKU To Record Talk
KFKU will record the convocation address of Erwin Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, and will present a half hour portion of it at 7 p.m. today as a delayed broadcast. The recording will take the place of the Chamber Music program usually presented at that hour
Draft Eligibles Can Relax—For Awhile
BY JOHNNY HERRINGTON
University males can sit back and relax—at least until June—without fear of being called by Uncle Sam's armed forces. That's the latest report from selective service officials.
The report stated that youths in college whose grades are good will continue to be deferred until graduation. There is some speculation on this point, since the final decision as to whether or not a service-ripe man may finish his senior rear rests with his local draft board.
Good students or ROTC cadets may be able to complete four to six years of education before service, the report says.
Draft needs have been altered somewhat by decisions regulating the size of the armed forces. The goal in military man-power is being reduced by 300,000 men from
4 million to 3,700,000.
Officials predict a big jump in draft calls in April and May. But total man-power needs are declining at this time.
Draft calls as a result of this decision are to be reduced slightly in 1952 and later years, officials say. Calls will flare up from time to time when volunteering lags.
Youths 19 years old will not be called for service in most areas until the fiscal year which begins June 1, 1952. Draft directors have been ordered not to make a general
Draft officials report that physical standards will remain high. There will be less pressure to squeeze out the last man from available pools of man-power.
drive on men under 20 until they have cleaned out the backlog of older men.
Universal military training, regardless of its ultimate fate, is not to affect the draft prospect now, officials say. Draft needs are determined by the rate at which the services grow toward their goal and by the size of the goal.
Armed forces now stand at 3½ million. The time for reaching the goal has been delayed nearly a year to June 30, 1953. The main need now is to be for replacements of men whose terms of service are running out.
In the current fiscal year ending next June 1, one million men will be needed. Nearly all will be civilian volunteers and draftees.
Es
A—Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
Daily Kansan Editorials
White's Great Virtue Was Unfailing Honesty
The general notion among readers is that if a newspaper's editorials are nothing else they at least should be consistent. Any deviation from the supposed policy of the paper brings some reaction—either complimentary or uncomplimentary, depending on whether or not the deviation agrees with the reader's ideas.
We were startled, therefore, when we first found that Kansas' most famous editor, the man for whom this school was named, was anything but a model of consistency. William Allen White called 'em as he saw 'em, and didn't waste time worrying about what he had said in previous editorials.
Readers of the Emporia Gazette weren't always pleased by what they read in the paper's editorials. Many of them thought Mr. White should have figured out some kind of a dogmatic set of principles dedicated to the great cause of consistency, and stuck to them come hell, high water. Populists or Republicans.
Even some Kansas editors criticized Mr. White for being inconsistent and said the Gazette possessed a foolish editorial disposition. Yet the Gazette was consistent in one important respect—Mr. White believed in the almighty power of honesty, and if there was anything dogmatic about Gazette editorials it was their devotion to honesty.
We think that devotion more than any other thing was responsible for the greatness of the Gazette and its editorials. Mr. White was, above all else, an honest man. His honesty is typified by the following reply he once made to a letter upbraiding him for being inconsistent.
April 25.1923.
"If a man is right today and wrong tomorrow, say so frankly in each case without malice, and yet heartily. A newspaper has one obligation and one only, to print the truth as far as it is humanly possible, and to comment upon the truth as candidly and as kindly as humanly possible, never forgetting to be merry the while, for after all the liar and the cheat and the panderer are smaller offenders than the solemn ass.
"That is why we seem inconsistent to the mind that wears labels and sends out its thinking to be done by party, by church, or by groups or cliques or clans or crowds and factions. The fool's jewel of consistency is largely paste!" —J.W.Z.
short ones
There are some Republicans who obviously haven't gotten the General idea yet about elections.
A government official says, "more scandals to come out." After all, you can't keep putting skeletons in a closet without losing a few bones in the process.
A big food company plans to use planes to fly shrimp down from Alaska, and it's a shame too, after all the free publicity the boats have been getting.
A St. Louis car dealer has had a number of bombs thrown through his showroom window. Prices have gone sky-high, but must the cars go with them?
Zeigler
"Take away the fact she's Dean's list and what have you got?"
William Allen White didn't make a very big splash when he enrolled here in September 1886. Maybe it was because he was sort of a fat, wise-cracking, good-humored youngster whom many people thought "too big for his britches."
William Allen White's Days at KU
Will White died in 1944, but he's still "pretty big folks" at the University of Kansas. The KU School of Journalism is called the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
In 1944 the William Allen White Foundation was set up at KU in connection with the School of Journalism. The purpose of the foundation is to provide realistic teaching material for the University of Kansas and for all other colleges and universities offering work in the fields of communication, and to bring to KU for lectures leaders of thought in Journalism and related fields of communication.
The record of Will White's work at KU is kept along with the transcripts of hundreds of other early KU students in the registrar's office at the University. It is recorded in a fine Spencerian script in black ink in an old ledger book. It is not a very impressive transcript.
White entered the University as a freshman, in spite of a year and a half of college work which he had completed at the College of Emporia. He enrolled in geometry, algebra, rhetoric, Latin, history, botany, and chemistry during his freshman year. In his junior years he took rhetoric, English, Latin, English History, English Constitution, and history.
His grades were not bad, but they were certainly not exceptional. He flunked solid geometry three times and because of those failures he did not meet his requirements for graduation. The rest of his subjects netted him about a "C" average. In three courses he was awarded only credit.
William C. Stevens, professor emeritus of botany, was an assistant instructor in botany when young Will came to the KU campus. Mr. Stevens said that he didn't have White in any of his classes, but knew of him and also knew many of White's close friends.
"I never heard him spoken of as an outstanding student," Mr. Stevens said. "He was known as a good fellow, a good companion, and as original in his ways, but he was not particularly outstanding as a student."
White once wrote that in college he was a round-faced fellow full of fun, and of the type that instructors love to strangle for the levity that he showed in the classroom.
Miss Maud Smelser, who is in charge of the Kansas collection in Watson library at KU, said recently that at one time she lived with Carrie Watson. KU's first librarian, who had known White as a student.
"Mr. White spent more time as a student with the books in the library (although there were not many) than he did with his classwork. He enjoyed that more than studying," Miss Smelser quoted Miss Watson as saying.
Mr. White once said, "If anything made me, it was Emerson and Whitman plus Dickens plus the King James version, with the realistic contemporary writers leading me on."
When White first came to the University there were 419 students. The University catalog advertised, "A year might be spent at the University very comfortably for $185." Included in this figure was $15 for books and $10 for term fees.
White's father died in October 1882. His mother worked to keep him in the College of Emporia, which he attended for a year and a half before going to KU, and came with him to Lawrence when he entered school there. She rented a little house and stayed in Lawrence all the time that he was in school from September 1886 to January 1890.
Will White had worked for two years on newspapers before going to the University of Kansas. He worked on the Emporia News and on the Butler-County Democrat in ElDorado.
While at KU he wrote for several others, among them the Lawrence Journal and the Lawrence Tribune, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat and the Kansas City News.
One year he was business manager for the University Review, and another year business manager of the University Times. He was editor of the College annual Helianthus in 1889, a copy of which is in the Kansas room of the University library.
He failed to graduate because of his trouble with solid geometry and because he failed to get credit for his work at the College of Emporia.
In later years (1934) he wrote to George O. Foster, then the registrar at KU, and asked what the chances might be of his earning an A.B. degree. He even considered taking some correspondence courses to make up the lacking credits.
"Sometimes when you have nothing to do, look up and see how many hours I would need for the purpose of graduation. I might be able to take some correspondence work and make up my old A.B. degree in my declining years," he wrote to Foster.
In 1940 he wrote, "On my 80th birthday I may go back and challenge the University to give me my degree and toddle across the stage with a cane, waving my false teeth at the faculty to show that I am a scholar, if not a gentleman."
The University offered him an honorary degree in 1934, but he refused it saying that by granting him a degree the University would set a precedent that might be embarrassing.
When William Allen White died, Chancellor Deane W. Malott of the University reviewed the fact that Mr. White had refused the honorary degree.
"The University had not granted an honorary degree since the late eighteen-nineties. As a result of his refusal it has retained the policy to this day. For if it were not to grant one to its own William Allen White, surely there could be no other candidates, for no one is more enshrined in the traditions and the spirit of this University." —Ellsworth Zahn.
Student Urges Year-Around Brotherhood
Editor, Daily Kansan:
As long as there have been Brotherhood weeks people have been lamenting the fact that we have to set aside one week to soothe our conscience instead of participating in a year-round campaign to stamp out bigotry. Joe Taylor's editorial in Tuesday's Kansas was in a similar vein.
Without doubling Mr. Taylor's sincerity, I can't help but question the effectiveness of such editorsorial toward accomplishing the end of extending Brotherhood week . It seems that the proper purpose of Brotherhood week should be the setting up of an organization that would take action on specific issues related to the spreading of equality.
At the very least, Mr. Taylor could have suggested giving support to the Brotherhood dinner being sponsored by the Lawrence League for
Instead of writing about discrimination in Iowa and California (things we are not in a position to do very much about), if Mr. Taylor had written about discrimination at KU, in Lawrence and in the state of Kansas he would be helping to make issues more concrete so that a plan for bringing about changes could be inaugurated during Brotherhood week. Issues that could have been mentioned are: the discriminatory policy of the Inter-Fraternity council at KU; discrimination in Lawrence restaurants and theaters; and the need for an FEPC bill in the state of Kansas.
Practice of Democracy (LLDP) in observance of Brotherhood week.
Elliot S. Valenstein Graduate student.
Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn,
Inland Daily Press Assn, Associated Collegiate Press, and Intercollegiate Press Assn. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10036.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief
Editorial Assistants ... Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor ... Ellsworth Zahm
Assistant Managing Editors ... Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman,
Joe Lastelic, Jim Powers
City Editor ... Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors ... Jeanne Fitzgerald, Phil Newman,
Jerry Renner, Katrin Swartz
Telegraph Editor
Assistant Telegraph Editor ... Max Thompson
Society Editor ... Dianne Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors ... Lorena Barlow, Paulyne Patterson
Sports Editor
News Advisor ... Victor
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager Dorothy Hedrick
Advertising Manager Emory Williams
Natural Resources Manager Virginia Johnston
Circulation Manager Ted Barbera
Classified Advertising Manager Mittheil Mitchell
Promotion Manager Phil Murray
Bachelor's R. W. Doores
Mail Subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and days, other weeks, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Kenan, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952 University Daily Kansas A—Page 3
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Weaver's Ready-to-Wear—Second Floor
May the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information continue to grow toward the topmost ideals which prompted its foundation. Weaver's are proud to have shared in this, another step of progress for the University, with the installation of venetian blinds and window shades for the School's new home.
Weaver's Home Furnishings—Third Floor
I will do my homework for you.
University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
Missouri. To Meet Jayhawks Monday
John Keller is again scheduled to start at forward for the Kansas Jayhawks when the stubbort Missouri Tigers invade Hoch auditorium Monday night. Tipoff time is 7:35.
Coach Phog Allen said about Keller that "He's been doing such a fine job that he'll probably be in there." Bill Lienhard, senior forward is still on the ailing list.
The rest of the starting five, will be the same. Dean Kelley and Bill Houghland will be in at guard, Clyde Lovellette at center, and Bob
16
CLYDE LOVELLETTE
KU To Enter Table Tennis Play
University representatives to the second annual Big Seven table tennis tournament at the University of Nebraska will be selected from the results of a round-robin tournament in the Student Union, Feb. 26, 27 and 28.
The tournament, sponsored by Student Union activities, is open to any male student in the University. Starting time for each session of the tourney will be 7:15 p.m.
From the round-robin tournament, three players will be chosen on the basis of greatest number of wins to go to Lincoln for the Big Seven match.
The first Big Seven tournament was won by the University last year. Five schools participated in the first tournament. Oklahoma and Iowa State, who were not in the 1951 competition, are expected to send teams this year.
Kansas State will be favored to win this year's tournament on the strength of brothers George and Jerry Gerhimian of Iran.
Kansas also is expected to send a strong team in an effort to retain for the second year the tournament traveling trophy.
Kenney at the other forward position.
The Jayhawkers will be shooting for their ninth conference win against one defeat. The Tigers have a 4-5 won lost record. Over-all, Kansas has won 18 while losing two. For Missouri it's a 12-9 over-all record.
Also shooting for another record Monday will be towering Clyde Lovellette. Already in possession of the Kansas single season-scoring record with 548 points set in 1951, Lovellette can break it with a 28-point show against Missouri. He has 521 points at the present.
At any rate, with Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas State and Colorado still left on the Jayhawkers' "toplay" list, it is a cinch that the Red and Blue center will crack his mark set last year.
But while records are still held in jeopardy, it's a winning performance that Allen's crew will have to turn in if the Jayhawks are to stay in the Big Seven race.
It took Dean Kelley's long shot from the corner with 22 seconds left to play for the Kansans to show the "Show-me" lads when they played at Columbia, Jan. 13. With Kelley's set shot, the Jayhawkers slipped by the Tigers 60-59.
And while the KU coach wasn't convinced that his cage club looked "convincing enough" a few weeks ago, he was well satisfied with the Jayhawk showing against the Oklahoma Aggies Tuesday.
"They played great ball," Allen said.
Sport Magazine Features 'Phog'
Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen is the subject of a three-page article in the April edition of Sport magazine scheduled to hit the newstands soon.
The article, written by former KU student Ed Burkholder, discusses some of the proposals by Dr. Allen—mostly on a basketball commissioner and on the 12-foot basket.
While sports writers throughout the country ponder and worry about the doctor's statements, the 66-year old Kansas coach is sticking to his guns. And, in the opinion of many, rightfully so.
Burkholder's article says in part, "When the scandal became public knowledge (referring to basketball scandals) a few years later. Dr. Allen first announced that college players were accepting bribes in 1945) Phog had a ready cure for
DEEP
KANSAS SWIMMERS prepare for their weekend meet with Colorado and Colorado A&M. Three of the men posing in Robinson pool are (left to right) Bob Wellborn, Charles Orthwein and John Welsh.
—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Swimming Team To Colorado For Meets With Buffs, Rams
The Kansas swimming team hopes to climb above the 50 per cent mark for its dual-meet season this weekend when the Jayhawkers meet Colorado and Colorado A&M in meets at Boulder and Fort Collins
By sweeping both ends of this double bill, the Jayhawkers can mount a 5-4 record. They now have won three and lost four.
Both of the Colorado clubs defeated Nebraska last weekend after losing in Lincoln the previous week. CU edged the Cornhuskers, 47-46, while A&M was taking a 48-45 vic-
the ills of college sports. He wanted the college presidents to surrender their authority to a national commissioner with an annual salary of $100,000."
Dr. Allen, in a statement to the Kansan, said today that "no one is able or capable to write, interpret and enforce the laws regarding athletics without some prejudice."
An enforcer of these laws is what athletics needs today, according to Dr. Allen.
"We have it in civic life. Even in banking we have a bank examiner who holds power. We should have the same type of powerful commissioner for athletics."
The doctor cited the 1919 Black Sox baseball scandal in saying after that "game-throwing" incident a federal judge was hired to enforce professional athletic laws.
"We need the same in college athletics," he said.
A powerful commissioner wouldn't be subject to localized pressure of separate conferences, Dr. Allen pointed out. And separate commissioners for each conference could never function satisfactorily, he said.
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The Rams beat Kansas, 48-44, in a double dual at Lincoln Colf. F, winning the closing 400-yard relay to clinch the triumph. Kansas beat the Buffaloes on the same day, 49-44.
tory.
Coach Walt Mikols and a 13-man squad left Thursday for the two-meet swing.
Making the trip are: John Buterin, John Bunten, John Ashley, Dick Eflin, Mahon Ball, Ken Reid 'and Sammy Perkins, free-stylers.
Pep Rally Monday Morning
Dean Glasco and John Welsh swim the backstroke. Orthwein swims the breaststroke. Dallas Chestnut, Bob Wellborn and Arch Unruh are the divers.
The Jay Janes will sponsor a pre- MU-KU game pep rally at 10:50 am. Monday, Feb. 25, in front of Strong hall.
It's No Fun To Be Left Out
Last call is going out for those who wanted a trip to Europe for this summer. Space is just about booked solid on all tours and travel plans. Today is the time to see Downs for your reservations.
Don't say we didn't warn you if you are left out.
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University Daily Kansan A—Page 2
Kansas Trackmen To Meet Missouri
In the mile, Wes Santee will run for Coach Easton's squad. In the Nebraska meet, he raced the distance in 4:17.6. Bob Fox, Missouri's miler, was able to do only 4:24.1 in this event against Iowa State in their last meeting.
The Kansas track squad will be out to win its third indoor dual meet of the season Saturday night, when the Jayhawkers meet Missouri at Columbia. ○
The Kansas team, under Coach Bill Easton, has defeated Kansas State and Nebraska in its previous meets this year.
The Jayhawkers are favored to take the meet on the basis of their tremendous speed in the track events, but Missouri has a number of fast men and could put up a stiff fight.
Against Nebraska last Saturday, the Kansans won all but one of the track events. Hersel Semper, Kansa's flying red-head wiped twenty seconds from the current KU-Nebraska indoor dual two-mile mark of 9:53.4.
Bob DeVinney will run for the Jawskers in the 60-yard low hurdles, and in the 60-yard dash. Don Hess and Bill Hawkey should give Kansas several points.
In the 880-yard run, Art Dalzell and Dave Fisher ran for Kansas against Nebraska, and they should be able to carry the load for Coach Easton in this event against Missouri.
The Kansas runners in the 440-yard dash will be John Reiderer and Don Smith.
Jim Floyd has cleared the 13-foot mark in the pole vault twice in indoor meets this season, and this is better than 12 feet 10 inches that Frank Dickey of Missouri vaulted against Iowa State.
Detroit—(U.P.)—Charles A. Chayne, General Motors engineer, says the car of the future will be designed primarily for safety. "We probably never will have what an engineer considers an ideal highway," he said. "It is up to engineers to design a car that will overcome the handicap."
In the high jump, Buzz Frazier of Kansas has leaped 6 feet $1 \frac{1}{2}$ inches and in the shot put, Galen Fiss has bettered the 45 foot mark.
To Design Cars For Safety
From "SHACK" to "CASTLE"
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The Big Seven conference basketball race will be a two-team drive down to the final wire, with the March 7 meeting between Kansas and Kansas State looming as the top attraction of the season.
Kansas State presently is at the top of the list with seven wins and no losses, but the Jayhawks are only a half game behind with a 8-1 record.
In the over-all standings, the KU
squad leads all conference teams
with a record of 18 wins against
two losses. Those being against the
Wildcats and Oklahoma A&M.
(All games) W I
K-State First, KU Second In Big Seven
(All games) W L
**Kansas** 18 2
Kansas State 16 3
Missouri 12 9
Iowa State 8 8
Oklahoma 7 13
Colorado 5 13
Nebraska 5 15
(Conference games) W L
Kansas State 7 0
**Kansas** 8 1
Oklahoma 4 4
Missouri 4 5
Iowa State 2 5
Colorado 2 6
Nebraska 2 7
Last Cardinal Signs Contract
St. Louis—U(P) —Catcher Del Rice has signed his 1952 contract with the St. Louis Cardinals, the last of the clubs' roster to agree to terms. Rice's contract reportedly called for a slight increase to an estimated $15,000 for the season. He left here by plane for the Cardinal's training camp at St. Petersburg, Fla.
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CONGRATULATIONS
to the Faculty and Students of the WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
on the formal opening of your
BEAUTIFUL NEW BUILDING
-from the folks downtown at the JOURNAL-WORLD
A—Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
Weekend Social Events
Jollife Hall To Entertain
Jolliffe hall will have a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the hall. The chaperones will be Mrs. Ferne Woodrow, Mrs. J. I. Hollingsworth and Mrs. Harry Ryan.
Watkins Hall To Hold Dance
Watkins Hall To Hold Dance
Watkins hall will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the hall. The chaperies will be Mrs. John R. Scott, Mrs. E. R. Hooper, Mrs. John Skie Sr. and Mrs. R. G. Roche.
Sigma Chi Dance Saturday
Sigma ch fraternity will hold a dance from 8 pi. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Kenneth M. Whyte, housemother, Mrs. Thomas A. Clark, Mrs. R. L. Blume, Mrs.F. L. MacCreary and Mrs. Fanny De-Loiz
Phi Psi-Theta Tea Dance
Phi Kappa Pai fraternity will entertain Kappa Alpha Theta sorority with a tea dance from 2 to 4 p.m. at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Mary Little, housemother, and Mrs. Eugene Alford.
Pi Beta Phi To Give Dance
Phi Beta Phi sorority will hold a dance from 6:30 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the Eldridge hotel. The chaperones will be Mrs. C. A. Thomas Mrs. Dean M. A. Thomas Mother Mrs. Belle Owl Miss Tetra Mother J. H. Kreamer Mrs. Thomas Stuart, Mrs. Andrew McKay and Mrs. Arthur Little.
Templin Hall Open House
Templin hall will have an open house from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday. The chaperones will be Mrs. Edna Ramage, Mrs. Joe H. Hope, Mrs. Fern Woodrow and Mrs. Lela Whiteford, housemother.
Sterling-Oliver Hall Dance
Sterling-Oliver hall will have a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the hall. The chaperones will be Mrs. Kathleen Caughman, Mrs. D. I. Denham, Mrs. Carlotta Nellis and Mrs. R. H. Wilson, housemother.
Sigma Pi-AOPi Tea Dance
Kappas To Give Semi-Formal
Medical Fraternity Party
Sigma Pi fraternity will entertain Alpha Omicron Pi sorority with a tea dance from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday at 1325 Tennessee street. The chaperones will be Mrs. Fanny DeLozier, housemother, and Mrs. D. I. Denham.
Phi Chi medical fraternity will hold a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Joe Hope, housemother, Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Leonard and Dr. Harold Nicholas.
Delta Chi Buccaneer Ball
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will entertain with a semi-formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the Lawrence Country club. The chaperones will be Mrs. Edwin B. Peet, housemother, Mrs. Chancey L. Veatch, Mrs. John Skir, Sr., J. H. Kreamer, Mrs. J. I. Hollingsworth and Mrs. Frank M. Baird.
Delta Chi fraternity will hold a Buccaneer ball from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Dana L. Anderson, Mrs. Edna M. Stewart, Mrs. Chancey L. Veatch and Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins.
Don Henry Co-op Entertains Don Henry co-op entertained Locksley hall with an hour dance Wednesday evening.
Religious Notes
Proposed Change In Council To Be Discussed By Baptists
Jim Gleason, college freshman,
will lead the devotions. The group
will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at
the First Baptist church.
Annette Smith, college sophomore and Richard Bradley, business senior, will present a discussion of the proposed change in the Student Religious council at the Roger William fellowship Sunday.
Members of the Newman club will nominate officers Sunday morning following the 10 a.m. Mass. Elections will be held the following week.
Newman Club Members To Nominate Officers
The executive board is planning a party and is also drawing up plans for the coming term, Nancy Morbach, president of the group, said.
Religion Professor To Speak To KU Disciple Fellowship
Dr. Edwin F. Price, professor in the School of Religion, will speak on Our Sin and Salvation, Old Fashioned," at the KU Disciple fellowship at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in Myers ball.
Devotions for the evening will be lead by Doris Long, college sophomore.
Following the evening meal, there will be a period of recreation and singing.
Lutheran Student Association To Study Missionary Work
The topic, "Here Am I," will be presented by the Rev. Mr. Naugle of Kansas City, Mo., Sunday evening the Lutheran Student association.
His talk will follow the cost supper at 6 p.m.
This month the emphasis of the programs is on missions, and the evening's program is designed to show the individual's place in missionary work as a whole.
The group will meet at the Trinity Lutheran church social rooms, 13th and New Hampshire streets.
Dr. John H. Patton, Westminster fellowship director, will give the sermonette, "What Do We Mean by God the Father, the Creator?" at Westminster fellowship Sunday.
Dr. Patton To Give Sermonette For Westminster Fellowship
The group will meet for supper at 5:30 p.m. at Westminster house, 221 Oread drive. Regular commission study groups will meet at 7 p.m. following vespers.
- HELD OVER THROUGH SATURDAY
Lawrence Demands 7 Days
HIGH Adventure!
STORY OF THE
UNTAMED NORTHWEST
FRONTIER!
JAMES STEWART
ARTHUR KENNEDY
JULIA ADAMS
ROCK HUDSON
"BEND OF THE RIVER"
Color by
Technicolor
LORI NELSON · JAY C. FLIPPEM · STEPIN FETCHIE
Continuous show Saturday from 1 p.m. - Open 12:45 Special Note: Due to the fact "Bend of the River" is held over . . . "Tight Little Island" will be shown at a later date Watch this newspaper for Dates. Granada
Eight women were selected to become Jay Janes, women's pep organization, at a rush tea given Wednesday in the Pine room of the Union.
8 Women Selected To Join Jay Janes
The new Jay Janes are Barbara Kesner, Alpha Omicron Pi, college sophomore; Kay Lambert, Pi Beta Phi, College sophomore; Nan Mosby, Kappa Alpha Theta, fine arts sophomore; Margaret Black, Kappa Kappa Gamma, college sophomore; Jeaneene Fischer, Kappa Kappa Gamma, college sophomore; Mary Ann Mahoney, Alpha Chi Omega, education sophomore; Luela Schmalried, Locklesh hall, college sophomore, and Esther Brown, independent at large, pharmacy sophomore.
A pledging service will be held at 5 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 27 in the Pine room of the Union.
Methodist Women's Club To Elect Officers Friday
Kappa Phi, Methodist club for women students, will hold election at 7 p.m. Friday in Danforth chapel.
There will also be a pledge service for all girls interested in joining Kappa Phi this semester. Worship service will be in charge of Marilyn Thomas, College senior, and Betty, Schoebe, graduate student.
Mrs. Edwin F. Price is sponsor for the group. Associate sponses is Miss Helen Currier. Patronesses are Mrs. Sam Gilchrist, Mrs. Dean Nesmith, Mrs. Harold Steeper, Mrs. Gerald Taylor, Mrs. Edward Van Eck and Mrs. Ferris Wolf.
Garvin Pledges Alpha Phi Alpha Phi sorority announces the pledging of Rebecca Garvin, pharmacy junior from Anthony.
Joyce Cameron, Alpha Omicron Pi, Kansas City, Mo., to Raymond Hower, Phi Kappa Tau, Salina.
Campus Pinnings
Jordan MacDougall, Delta Gamma, Kansas City, Kan., to Gene Rourke, Phi Gamma Delta, Kansas City, Kan.
Veterans In Topeka Hospital Entertained By KU Women
Veterans at the Winter General hospital in Topeka were entertained this week with a program of singing and dancing by women from earlier hall. Participants in the program included Nancy Gaskell, Lucy Giddings, Lou Ann Smee, Vera Smoots, Elizabeth Helsley and Avalon York.
The group was under the sponsorship of the Lawrence Red Cross and Junior Chamber of Commerce.
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Evening Features Tonight — 7:22 & 9:24 p.m.
Continuous Sat. & Sun. Features At 1:37 —
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Added Color Cartoon & Late News
1.
BRIGHT VICTORY
This newspaper does not sell display advertising on Page One.
That, quite properly, is reserved for the day's most important events and happenings throughout the world.
Yet, so important in the annals of the screen is "Bright Victory" that, if we could, we would place this advertisement on the front page so all could see and know . . .
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That "Bright Victory" inscribes a new chapter in the annals of the screen . . . that it answers a cry born of hate, fear, despair . . .
with the substance of love, courage and faith.
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Kennedy
"BEST ACTOR
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Film Critics
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ermerse, with the understanding that the bill will
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TRANSPORTATION
IRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether for business or leisure. Phone: Louis Odafer, 631-805, Downs Travel service, 1015 Mass.
sk us about family rates, sky coach,
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winter. Colleague train. International Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
FOR RENT
URNISHED APT. for rent at 1213 Ohio
second floor, next to bath; new sink
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$157.1M.
RADIATE STUDENT wants young
adults to campus. Call 2519 eavings.
OOMS FOR BOYS, one single room,
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ENT A TYPEWRITER and start the new wemaster with higher grades. Only the new models cost $3.80 per month for portable and standard machines. Studies on Book Store.
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STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass.
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CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, MALE, home-made pies and customer air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Crystal Café. 609 Vt.
!AYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop. Their needs are our business. Our owners own the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur, the fur,
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DRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS! Pelican Graphos instruments are here. For draw-
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Special rates to Students on subscriptions to TIME, LIFE, AND NEWSWEEK magazines. Order yours today at the Student Union Book Store. 22
Have your FOUNTAIN PEN REAPIRED
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New shipment of POCKET BOOKS just them at the Student University Book Store.
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BLUE PLASTIC bilfold containing identification, driver's license, and $16.00. If you do the money, but return papers, Patty Edwards, 420 West 11th, 26 phone 860.
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BOY TO BUS dishes 12:30 to 1:30 for meal and for extra parties. Photos KU 254
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A—Page 7
Last Times Tonight Russ Morgan "DISC JOCKEY"
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REVUE STARTING
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Late News — Color Cartoon "Stupid Cupid"
Campus Affairs Committee Discusses Fellowship Needs
University Daily Kansa
What are the needs for fellowship on the campus? What chances are there for fellowship? How can these chances be enhanced? These were the questions considered by the Campus Affairs committee Wednesday night.
For A Hilarious Good Time Make A Date For FRIDAY NIGHT
co-starring CORINNE CALVET and MARION MARSHALL
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
DEAN MARTIN and LEWIS
IN HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION
SAILOR BEWARE
The committee felt that because the greatest part of the students' time or interest was concerned with his class work, it was there the greatest potential was to be found.
"A class can be made much better by a spirit of fellowship," according to one participant. She explained that not only the individuals but the group as a whole benefited from a friendly atmosphere.
Tonight - Saturday
"LAWLESS COWBOY"
"EXPERIMENT ALCATRAZ"
Mr. Reid, although unable to be present, is also presenting a number of letters from various literary and political notables.
The collection contains an original autographed cartoon by virtually every prominent cartoonist of the last 50 years.
"The tone set in the classroom by the instructor is the most important factor in obtaining such an attitude or atmosphere," another girl said. She felt that one big step which could be made by an instructor is the use of both the students' first and last names when calling roll.
dedication today.
Mr. Reid is the originator of the pictorial biography-type cartoon and will give several originals on this type, including those of Dougla MacArthur, Thomas E. Dewey, Alfred Landon, and Wendell L. Wilkitt He also will give the first drawing ever made over television, dating back to 1931.
Mr. Reid is now national president of the American Artists Professional League. He is a former Kansan and KU student.
J-School Gets Cartoon Collection
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
A leading New York cartoonist- Albert T. Reid-will present a collection of famous cartoons to the School of Journalism during the
Suspense
Results of the last discussion meeting which concerned school spirit, were reported as having gained future admittance for the KuKu's and Jay James to all games. Also it is planned that the custom of singing the alma mater song after the games will be resumed.
PHOTOS COPIED
A small discussion class is much easier to become acquainted in, agreed the group, but the difficulty of a large lecture group can be overcome if the instructor takes the initiative and the students are interested.
SUN - MON - TUES
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This, she said, would give the students a stepping stone to use in getting acquainted. Knowing a student by face enabled her to speak to him, she explained, but to know his name made it much more easy
and more friendly.
original picture returned send any size photo or
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A—Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
Floor Plan Of New Journalism Building
MEMORIAL READING ROOM
SCHOOL OFFICE
DEAN'S OFFICE
OFFICE
OFFICE
MEN REST ROOM
CORRIDOR
COMPOSING ROOM
PRESS ROOM
BINDERY
FILE & WORK ROOM
KANSAN ADV. ROOM
KANSAN NEWS ROOM
PROOF READING
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PRESS OFFICE
VESTIBULE
FIRST FLOOR PLAN
NEWS & FEATURE LAB
EDITING LAB
WOMEN REST ROOM
CLASS ROOM
OFFICE
STORAGE
LECTURE ROOM
CORRIDOR
TYPOGRAPHY LAB
STORAGE
OFFICE
RADIO CLASS ROOM
STUDIO CONTROL
CLASS ROOM
ADV. DESIGN
SECOND FLOOR PLAN
European News Specialists Study American Life At KU
Five European employees of the United States Information service are visiting the University as part of a two-month investigation into the American way of life.
Included in the group is Marie Therese Barreau, a press assistant from Paris. She was born in Versailles and attended the College d'Hulst there. She joined the USIS in June, 1949, and is an assistant to the Paris press attache. She has served as an interpreter for congressmen and other important Americans touring France.
Per Amby, editor from Copenhagen, Denmark, has been with the USIS since 1946. He studied at the University of Copenhagen before becoming a correspondent for a Danish newspaper from 1942 to 1944.
He has worked for the U.S. Office of War Information in Stockholm, the Associated Press in Copenhagen, the press section of the Danish
army, and as correspondent for two Danish newspapers. He is now editor of the Daily News Bulletin and distribution expert for special features. He also is a feature writer for news pertaining to the Mutual Defense Assistance program.
Aino Niskanen, motion picture assistant from Helsinki, Finland has studied at the University of Helsinki. In September, 1946, she joined the staff of the USIS in Helsinki where she supervises the motion picture booking office.
A. Philippe Vos, chief of press publications in Bern, Switzerland, was born near Brussels, Belgium. He attended the Amsterdam "modern" college, where he specialized
in language, literature and economics.
In 1936 he became office manager for Press Wireless, first in Amsterdam, then in Bern, and in 1946, Berlin. In April, 1948, Mr. Vo joined the staff of Saffron, in the press and publication section involves contact with key figures in the Swiss press.
The fifth member of the group is Albert H. Roche, press assistant in Brussels, Belgium. He received his bachelor of science degree from the University of Grenoble.
During the first World war Mr. Roche served with the French Air force. After some experience in the press and publications field he became managing editor of the Press Association in 1927. Twelve years later he joined the staff of the French embassy's information service in Brussels.
From 1942 to 1944 Mr. Roche was general secretary of the French Red Cross in Brussels and after the war he was with the French consulate there. Since 1949 Mr. Roche has been chief of the USIS press section in Brussels.
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Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
SECTION B
49th Year, No. 95
$25,000 Press To Print Kansans Twice As Fast
A new press which will print nearly twice as many Daily Kansans in the same length of time as the one now in operation is being installed in the new Journalism building.
T. C. Ryther, superintendent of the University Press, said that they hope to have the new Model E Goss set up in time to print the last Kansan of the semester.
The press cost $25,000—nearly three times the cost of the old press, installed in 1924. The condition of the old press, combined with the increased demands of the student body, make the change advisable at this time. Mr. Ryther said.
Mr. Ryther, said that installation of this press, as well as being a technical problem, is expensive and time-consuming.
A dozen men were needed to carry the parts of the press from a truck into the Journalism building. This unloading alone took a full day.
Many skilled workers, electricians, including a man from the Goss press factory at Chicago, were needed to assemble and prepare this press for operation.
The new press, although it has the same size page capacity as the old one, is more elaborate and complicated than the 1924 model Duplex which will only print 3,000 Kansans an hour running at top speed.
The new flat bed press is run by a variable speed motor which makes for smoother operation in the production of its capacity of 5,500 Kansans an hour.
Type Lab Gets $10,000 Setup
The laboratory will house complete facilities for training in all phases of typography, including make-up, papier-talob and full newspaper page size.
Ten thousand dollars worth of new equipment has been purchased for the typography laboratory located on the second floor of the new Journalism building.
The new laboratory is a great improvement over the space and equipment used for the typography lab in the "Shack."
A small press and a few type cases were the extent of the typography lab in the old Journalism building. The material, borrowed from the front of the press, was located at the front of the large lecture room in the "Shack."
The equipment purchased for this laboratory includes three type cabinets, two Vandercook proof presses, composing table, paper cutter, ink and roller cabinet, galley storage cabinet, saw, strip cabinet, makeup table, two bindery tables, and about 130 fonts of foundry type of various faces and sizes from 8 point to 72 point.
Also on view in the lab will be a 100-year-old Washington hand press, formerly used by the state printing company and by Ferd Volland Jr., state printer.
"It is not the aim of the school to train students to become printers, but the school does intend that each graduate shall be capable of estimating costs, directing operations and knowing whether he is getting the work he is entitled to get from employees in the plant he hopes to operate some day," according to Dean Burton W. Marvin.
R. F. G. A.
DEAN OF THE JOURNALISM SCHOOL—The expansion of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information is under the direction of Dean Burton W. Marvin. Dean Marvin, an ex-newspaperman, formerly taught at Northwestern and Columbia universities before coming to KU as head of the school in 1948.—Kansas photo by Al Marshall.
Dean Marvin Directs J-School's Progress
An old building, a new name, and an ideal were passed on to Dean Burton W. Marvin when he came to the University in 1948.
Then came a long stint with the Chicago Daily News. Over a nine-year period he held the positions of reporter, feature writer, copy reader, city editor, assistant cable editor and telegraph editor, giving him varied experience in newspaper work. During his last year on the paper he lectured at Northwestern.
The dedication of the School of Journalism's new building realizes the ambition of Dean Marvin and those before him.
The name, the ideal, and the school are dedicated to the memory of William Allen White whose courage and integrity as a newspaper-man set an example for American journalism to follow.
"The immediate goal has been reached." Dean Marvin said, "but before the faculty and myself is the continuous aim of developing young journalists who know how to write and who know what they are writing about."
After being graduated from the University of Nebraska, he went to work with the Lincoln (Neb.) Star as a cub reporter. The following year he was awarded the $1,000 Hitchcock scholarship at Columbia university and received his master's degree there in 1937.
"Proficiency in technique built on a strong foundation in the humanities, and the social and physical sciences makes the best journalists, the best journalism," he said.
He has been a working journalist for ten years and has taught at the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern university, and in the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia university, considered two of the finest such schools in the country.
Dean Marvin possesses a background in writing and teaching that well fits him for his position as head of the journalism school.
There is a precedent for his post at the University. His father, Dr. Henry H. Forsyth, joined the University of Nebraska faculty, and four years later was
With all of his background and experience, Dean Marvin is still a young man, and a young man in charge of a young school indicates exuberance, progress and achievement.
named head of the physics department there.
Since Dean Marvin's arrival three and one-half years ago there have been many achievements in the school.
In September of 1948, the school itself began operating as a separate unit. It had been authorized in 1944. Since 1911 it had operated as a department in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The course, Communications in Society, was instituted in 1949. This course for sophomores was designed to give students a survey of the fields of journalism, an idea whether they were interested in journalism, and an idea of the fields a student might specialize in.
The foundation sponsors yearly lectures, has compiled numerous problem case histories on ethics and responsibility in newspaper reporting, and promoted the Institute Press and Medical Inness in Topcake. n "May 1951."
Feb. 10, 1950 marked the first meeting of the William Allen White foundation, started by Kansas newspapermen and other friends of Mr. Dean Marvin, tool over as director of the foundation in February 1950.
In 1950 the school was presented FM radio station transmitting equipment and a 520-foot FM tower by John P. Harris and his brother, S. F. Harris, publisher of the Ottawa Herald, in memory of their uncle, F. M. Harris, chairman of the board of regents who died in July, 1950.
The school launched the Inland Daily Press association newspaper public relations contest in 1951 in which there were entries from more than 20 states. The contest was held in cooperation with the Inland Daily Press Association.
Journalism School Got Start In 1891
From a basement room in Fraser hall to the "Shack" to the new Journalism building—that is the story of the growth of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
Fraser was the first home of journalism at the University way back in '91 when one journalism course was offered in the department of history and social science, and then withdrew for lack of students.
Three years later a journalism course was again offered, this time under the department of English and only three students enrolled. Professor E. M. Hopkins again set up a class in 1903 and ten students enrolled.
The following year the semiweekly Kansan appeared, the father the present University Daily Kansan which was first published in 1912.
In 1907, Charles M. Harger, Abilene publisher, and L. N. Flint, then alumni secretary, assumed the teaching of classes in reporting, editing and advertising.
The courses were formed into a department in 1911 with Merle Thorpe as chairman. The department moved from the southeast basement room of Fraser to the east rooms of the "Shack" where the bindery and printshop are now. Needing additional space, Professor Thorpe built the wooden annex which sticks out toward the library.
Mr. Thorpe resigned in 1916 to become editor of "Nation's Business" and Mr. Flint became chairman of the department, a post he held for 25 years.
Later the department moved upstairs and inherited the odors of the chemistry, medical and pharmaceutical lab. Although full rights to the building were not obtained by the department until 1923, it was known as the Journalism building after 1913.
There was a great deal of opposition to the teaching of journalism in those early days. Many Kansas editors were skeptical at first. By conferences held at the University and various other services offered to the editors of Kansas this opposition slowly died away.
The department continued to grow from three students in 1894 to 1916 students in 1916. Through the years the department gained recognition and prestige.
Mr. Flint retired as department head in 1941, and Professor Elmer F. Beth became acting chairman of the department. He was relieved of these duties in the fall of 1948 when Barton in Barrin was appointed by the Wickham Athon White School of Journalism and Public Information.
From June, 1944, when the school was authorized by the board of regents, until the fall of 1948 student journalists were enrolled in the school. In 1949, a school carried official status as a separate branch of the University.
The School of Journalism was accredited by the American Council of Education for Journalists in the spring of 1948. It is one of 35 such schools in the United States to be accredited.
Plans were made to remodel the old Fowler shops built in 1899 to house the new journalism school. For the accomplishment of this purpose $300,000 was provided by the William Allen White Foundation.
The foundation is an organization which was set up after the great Kansas editor's death, the income of which is to be used for journalism public service activities.
The school moved to the remodeled Fowler shops this semester. Journalism classes are now being conducted in the building. The presses will not be moved from the "Shack" until next summer.
Photo Labs Get New Equipment
New darkrooms, cameras and miscellaneous photographic equipment have given the University one of most modern photographic laboratories found at any school of journalism.
The old Journalism building had a combination reading room and photographic laboratory. The laboratory was crowded and sparsely equipped. It had only three cameras one enlarger, a set of developing tanks and other meager photographic supplies.
The laboratories in the new building; located in the basement include seven rooms. One for enlarging, a storage room, a storage unit, and a video editing and photography, and four dark-rooms all fully equipped.
Now the photographic laboratory is equipped with four Speed Graphics, two Crown Graphics, one Graflex, one Leica and one Automatic Rolflexe. All the camera except the Graflex are equipped with flash attachments for news photography.
Victor J. Daniilov, assistant professor of journalism, said that this new equipment has increased interest in the news photography course. Enrollment has increased from six to the maximum 16 students in one semester.
Four new enlargers, flood lamps for portrait photography, automatic driers, four sets of filters, and stainless steel sinks are among the items in the $5,000 worth of new equipment.
He pointed out that this new equipment is used to give students the opportunity to "learn by doing". Each student has projects and assignments each week. He also may instruct and sell them to the Daily Kansan.
As a term project the student is assigned to take a picture story. Last semester, one student sold his term project to Downbeat magazine.
Although the cost of equipment, flashbulbs, film, etc., is costly to the student, running around $30, much of this expense may be defrayed by selling pictures for publication, Mr. Danilov said.
Although preference is given to journalism majors, anyone may take the course. Mr. Daniilov said an advanced course may be worked to make of those who have a further interest in news and portrait photography.
Numerous Items Contributed To KU Historical Collection
A number of historical items will be presented to the School of Journalism and Public Information today as part of a drive to establish KU as the center of historical journalism.
The school will receive an oil portrait that shows Mr. White at his desk at the Emporia Gazette. It is the work of Joseph Hirsch, leading portrait painter of New York. The donor is Harry Scherman of New York, president of the Book-of-the-Month club.
George Matthew Adams, columnist and head of the George Matthew Adams newspaper syndicate in New York, will be present to present his collection of first editions of William Allen White's books and many other books and pamphlets on journalism.
Another gift is the Albert T. Reid
collection of famous cartoons. Reid, a former Leavenworth and Topeka publisher and leading cartoonist in New York for many years, may be present to make the presentation.
William L. White, well-known author and son of W. A. White, will present some moments. These will be articles and letters of his father dealing with KU and Kansas journalism.
Ferd Volland, the state printer, is giving KU a 100-year-old Washington hand press, which until recently was used in the state printing plant for making proofs of books.
B—Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
W.A.WhiteFoundation Studies News Problems
By BOB LONGSTAFF
The William Allen White foundation—dedicated to the enrichment of journalism education—was established on the campus as a memorial to America's most famous small town editor shortly after his death in 1944.
The foundation's work is divided into two phases—annual lectures at the University and the collection of case histories of journalistic problems involving ethics and moral responsibility.
The foundation brings leaders of thought in fields exemplified by Mr. White to the University. These lectures are given at the University and are published for distribution in the United States and abroad.
James B. Reston, New York Times diplomatic correspondent, gave the first foundation lecture in 1950. Ernest K. Lindley, Washington correspondent for Newsweek magazine, was the second lecturer in 1951.
Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, who is the principal speaker at the dedication ceremonies of the new Journalism building is the third lecturer in the series.
A second phase of the foundation's aims is to develop realistic teaching material in the form of case histories of actual problems in the operation of newspapers, radio stations and magazines.
Charles G. Pearson instructor in journalism from the fall of 1947 to June of 1950, was the first assistant with the foundation. He was critically injured in an auto accident last year and is still hospitalized.
Harold Reddock, 1949 graduate and currently a graduate student, replaced Mr. Pearson last July. Mr. Reddock worked two years as an editor of weekly papers.
editor of weekly papers The research assistant interviews editors, reporters and other persons involved to get a chronological history of the circumstances in the story.
story. With this history, the research assistant prepares a case to be used in the class room. The purpose of the case is to transplant the student into the particular situation. It is not so much concerned with the techniques of the story as it is with the responsibility of the press to the public.
the public.
"Many schools and departments of journalism around the country have expressed an interest in utilizing the cases, and cases have been sent out to them," explained Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and director of the foundation.
Dean Marvin is using some of the cases in teaching Editorial Problems and Policies, a course in the school.
The foundation was financed by funds raised in a nation-wide campaign in 1946-47. The radio, motion picture and publishing industries provided half of the $750,000 needed for a five-year program. The remaining half was supplied by public subscription.
The late Henry J. Allen, former governor of Kansas and Wichita publisher, was the foundation's first president. John P. Harris, publisher of the Hutchinson News-Herald, is the present president. Alvin S. McCoy, reporter for the Kansas City Star, is vice-president. Karl Klooz, bursar of the University, is secretary-treasurer.
Trustees of the foundation include leaders in journalism, public affairs and industry in the United States. They are:
Daniel R. Anthony III, publisher,
Leavenworth Times; Roy F. Bailey,
former publisher of the Salina
Journal; W. A. Bailey, general manager,
the Kansas City Kansan; W. T.
Beck, editor and publisher of the
Holton Recorder; Henry S. Blake,
vice-president and general manager
of Capper publications of Topeka;
Fred W. Brinkerhoff, publisher,
Pittsburg Sun and Headlight; Robert U. Brown, editor, Editor & Publisher magazine, New York City;
Herbert Brucker, editor, Hartford, Conn., Courant; Erwin D. Canham; Hodding Carter, editor and publisher, the Delta Democrat-Times, Greenville, Miss.; R. A. Clymer, editor, ElDorado Times; Marvin H. Creager, editor emeritus, Wilwaukee Journal; Arthur L.
PETER W.
Crookham, editorial editor, Portland, Oregon Journal; Henry Darby, former United States senator from Kansas and industrialist and civic leader in Kansas City, Kan;
HAROLD REDDOCH
Doris Fleeson, Washington, syndicated columnist; Frank E. Gannett, publisher of the Gannett Newspapers, Rochester, N. Y.; Henry J. Haskell, editor, Kansas City Star; Ben Hibbs, editor, Saturday Evening Post, Philadelphia; Alfred G. Hill,
publisher, Chester (Pa.) Times and the Oak Ridge Oak Ridger; David Hinshaw, public relations executive, New York City, director of the foundation's nation-wide campaign in 1945-46;
Wharton Hoch, editor and manager of the Marion Record-Review; Arthur Holman of Arthur Holman, Inc.; Gene A. Howe, president and publisher, Amarillo Globe and News; Palmer Hoyt, editor and publisher, Denver Post; Karl Koerper, vice-president and general manager of the University of Lawrence, Washington political reporter and columnist and editor and publisher of the U.S. News and World Report magazine;
Ernest K. Lindley; Engene Lowther, general manager, Emporia Gazette; Henry R. Luce, editor-in-chief, time magazine; William R. Kraft, publisher, Daily Star; Luman G. Miller, editor, Belleville Telescope; Melville Minton, president, G. P. Putnam's Sons, publishers, New York City;
Dwight Payton, editor and publisher, Overbrook Citizen; John Redmond, editor and publisher, Burlington Republican; James B. Reston; Roy A. Roberts, president, Kansas City Star; Harry Scherman, president, Book-of-the-Month club; Andrew F. Schoepel, U. S. Senator from Kansas, former governor of Kansas; Chester Shaw, executive editor, newswell magazine; C Smith, chief editor, business manager San Francisco Chronicle; Roger W. Straus, chairman of the board, American Smelting and Refining company, New York City; Harold P. Trusler, Emporia businessman and president of the William Allen White foundation in Emporia, and Basil L. Walters, executive editor of the Knight newspapers.
The annual meeting of the foundation will be today, following the dedication luncheon, at 3 p.m. Another annual meeting is the breakfast in Washington, D. C., held in conjunction with the convention of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in April.
'Scoop Club' Characterized KU Journalism In Early 1900s
One of the University's most unusual clubs was founded shortly after journalism was organized into a department.
The organization, known as the "Scoop Club," consisted of journalism students who had already made their living by newspaper writing.
The members dominated the Daily Kansan and filled all the editorial posts on the student edition of The New York Journal of Journal published April 25, 1908.
The club exposed bootlegging in Lawrence and aided in the conviction of four illegal liquor dealers.
The club was organized for the purpose of inviting prominent men in the newspaper field to speak at the University, and to discuss topics
of mutual interest.
Some of the men who spoke before the club were William Allen White, C. J. Dilton, Ray Palmer of the Kansas City Star, and C. C. Clein, managing editor of the Kansas City Journal.
"Scoop Club" meetings were held every two weeks. "Each meeting was different," according to a report by the Daily Kansan. Two members were placed in charge of the program with the sky the limit.
"The members might discuss current events, some phase of newspaper work, their own reportorial experience, or they might debate the advantages of anarchy and socialism."
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CHANCELLOR FRANKLIN D. MURPHY
Chancellor Murphy Labels J-School 'One Of The Best'
"No one is a provider of the new home of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information than I.
"Behind the School and its new building stands a half century's tradition of great teaching and achievement. The work of many devoted teachers which is mirrored in the accomplishments of hundreds of alumni has made KU a name envied in journalism.
"In its new home the School has the physical plant for maintaining the high standards of the past. But more important, the School can now advance into new areas of teaching. It can, in the fullest sense of the word, now fulfill the promise of the "... and Public Information" portion of its name.
"No school of journalism can boast better facilities for the teaching of news photography, radio, news typography, and the revolutionary techniques of offset printing, as well as the more familiar news and advertising sequences. Television training will be added soon.
"This new building will first serve individuals, but through them the William Allen White School will serve the state, the nation, and that part of the world where freedom of information exists."
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy
WNU
Congratulations To UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS On Its New
On Its New
Tyopographic Laboratory
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION
Of Kansas City
Is Proud of Its Part In Furnishing
COMPOSING ROOM
and
BINDERY EQUIPMENT
For This New Department
Journalism School Places 50 Graduates Each Year
BY JOHNNY HERRINGTON
About 50 University journalism school graduates are placed each year on newspapers, magazines and radio stations throughout the country by the school placement bureau.
Since the fall of 1941, when Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, took over as chairman of the placement service about 500 journalism graduates have been placed by the bureau.
Ever though job placings have been relatively easy in recent years, there never was a real problem of placing graduates with good records, Mr. Beth said.
The bureau places graduates in both news and advertising fields of work. And, according to Mr. Beth, neither field seems to predominate over the other.
"Any graduate who had done even a fair job while he was here could be placed with little difficulty," Mr. Betch said. "And in recent years, we've been able to place almost everyone."
In the news side, the agency puts graduates on newspapers as reporters, reporter-photographers, telegraph editors and in certain specialty
Students also are placed on trade journals and industrial publications. During the war, several graduates went directly into press association jobs. This situation has changed somewhat since the war.
As well as being placed as advertising solicitors for newspapers, advertising graduates are put in advertising jobs on trade journals and specialized publications. They also are found jobs as advertising managers for department stores and in public relations work.
Graduates of both sides of the journalism field are put into positions in radio stations.
jobs such as sports, society and women's editors.
The only real difficulty met in finding jobs for students, he said, is when they request a job in a certain area of the country. In such a case the applicant will probably have to find his own job.
But even then, the bureau, with a great number of contacts all over the country, can help in placing the graduate.
Much of the success of the placement bureau can be attributed to the close contact the agency keeps with journalism school graduates.
A complete card file is kept on each graduate. After he leaves the University and a job opening appears, he can be contacted by the bureau and informed of the opening.
"A lot of our success." Mr. Beth said, "comes from our honest recommendations. If a student was a poor one while he was here, we tell the prospective employer." At the same time the bureau does its best to place every job-hunting graduate of the school.
Mr. Beth started working with placements at the University of Idaho in 1930. In his 10 years there, he helped about 80 graduates find jobs. He came to the University in 1940 and was appointed chairman of the placement bureau in 1941. In that time he has placed 500 students.
Beth Revised KU Journalism Program
Following in the footsteps of Prof. L. N. Flint, pioneer in journalism education, Prof. Elmer F. Beth mode a number of notable innovations and strides while serving as acting chairman of the department of journalism from 1941 to 1948.
Two major contributions were a new emphasis on laboratory-type, practical training in as many courses as possible and close integration of
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952 University Daily Kansas B—Page 3
Press Group Has Full Membership
The Kansas Press association, an organization of weekly and daily newspapers in Kansas, is the only state press association that has 100 per cent membership of the papers in its state.
Guiding light in the association's success has been Larry Miller, secretary-manager with offices in Topeka.
The KPA has improved the publishing and editing of Kansas newspapers by funneling helpful information through its channels.
The KPA led efforts to attain the "ideal" newspaper. It helped found the Kansas Historical society and establish the office of the state printer.
To promote national advertising for Kansas newspapers, the Kansas Press Service incorporated as a corporate institution, was begun by the KPA in 1945.
The KPA was one of four state associations represented at the establishment of Newspaper Advertising Service incorporated, a national organization to promote general advertising, especially in weekly newspapers.
Leonard McCalla, publisher of the Garnett Anderson Countian, is president of the KPA this year, Harry Valentine, editor and publisher of the Clay Center Dispatch, is vicepresident and Wharton Hoch, editor of the Marion Record-Review, is treasurer.
The Kansas Press Service signs only one contract for the entire list of newspapers at each paper's current national rate and writes and individual contracts with each advertising agency for the publisher.
H. A. Meyer Jr., past president, is a KU graduate. The first full-time secretary-manager, ejected in 1938, Rusco, who is also a KU graduate.
This service saves both time and money for the advertiser and the publisher.
The University Daily Kansan is a member of the second district of the KPA, which includes Douglas, Johnson, Franklin, Anderson, Linn, Allen, Bourbon, Miami and Wyandotte counties.
journalism education at the University with the humanities and the liberal arts.
Wherever possible, Professor Beth revised courses to include actual practice at the skills involved in the courses. For example, he pointed out, Editing I was primarily a discussion course in 1940, when he came to the University from the University of Idaho.
Another function developed by Professor Beth was the job placement system for graduates.
He and Thomas C. Ryther, assistant professor of journalism and superintendent of the University of Kansas Press, visited the buildings of schools and departments of journalism on five university campuses to supplement their ideas on quantification of journalism and the University Press Man on their observations were applied in the final plans for the new building.
nalism occupied Jan. 25 of this year
The department soon set up laboratory procedure, under which the students actually checked news stories for accuracy, clarity, organization and other factors making for good news writing, and then wrote headlines and made up pages.
As Professor Beth took steps to integrate journalism closely with the humanities and liberal arts, he personally became involved in some of the innovations such as Western Civilization. He is a member of the faculty committee responsible for planning and administering the Western Civilization course.
The first actual steps toward laying out and construction of the new journalism building took place during Professor Beth's administration as acting chairman.
Practice in setting type was added to History and Art of Printing, and students in Reporting of Public Affairs were required to work a certain number of hours each week on daily newspapers in this area. A course in Retail Advertising was set up with the University Daily Kansan as the laboratory in which students serviced retail advertising accounts in Lawrence.
He made the first rough drafts of the floor plan for remodeled Fowler Shops, which the School of Jour-
This system, which he started working out in 1941, is operating smoothly today and has as its principal feature a "perpetual inventory" card on which is recorded detailed information about each graduate. The key to the system is constant contact with each graduate.
In June, 1948, the School of Journalism was accredited by the American Council on Education for Journalism after an exhaustive investigation of facilities, faculties and course offerings by questionnaire and personal visitation.
Professor Beth is secretary-treasurer of the Association for Education in Journalism, the Association of Accredited Schools and Departments of Journalism and the American Society of Journalism School Administrators.
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ONE-TIME ACTING DIRECTOR—One of the leaders in the move to modernize the journalism curriculum has been Prof. Elmer F. Beth. He served as acting director of the department of journalism from 1941 to 1948.-Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
KU Serves As Headquarters For U.S. Journalistic Training
The national executive center for college training in journalism is in the new Journalism building, the office of Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism.
Mr. Beth is secretary-treasurer of three national associations and is director of a national teacher-placement bureau maintained by the associations. He has been re-elected annually since he took office in 1948.
The Association for Education in Journalism is the largest of the groups and has about 500 college teachers as individual members besides two societies which are coordinate institution members.
During the five years, the bureau has job openings for more than a hundred colleges and universities—
The other is the American Society of Journalism School Administrators, a group of 23 schools most of which have not been accredited.
One of the latter is the Association of Accredited Schools and Departments of Journalism made up of the 40 schools which have been accredited as professional schools by the American Council on Education for Journalism.
The AEJ Placement bureau was founded in 1947, and Professor Beth has directed it since 1948. The bureau is a central clearing house for most college teaching jobs in most public relations, public relations, About a hundred teachers a year register as job prospects.
jobs ranging from instructorships to deanships. All the direct-mail promotion, correspondence, data collection, record-keeping, and financial work is done here.
As secretary-treasurer of AEJ, AASDJ and ASJA斯. Professor Beth collects all membership dues, keeps funds for the Journalism Quarterly (a professional journal supported by the associations), answers about ten business a day, advises other officers, prepares briefed materials including that required in joint convention, acts as convention registrar and secretary, and writes the convention proceedings for official publication.
In 1948, the name was changed to Association of Accredited Schools and Departments of Journalism after announcement had been made of the 34 schools which had been accredited for the first time; the University of Kansas was on that list.
The University of Kansas has been a member of AASDJ since it was founded in 1917 as the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism.
The accrediting agency, the American Council of Education for Journalism, is a body of five educator
(Continued to page 7)
Journalism School Equipped With New Underwood Deluxe Rhythm Shift Standard Typewriters
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B—Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
Daily Kansan's History Goes Back To 1889-90
By MARILYN DUBACH
The story of the development of the University Daily Kansan is also the story of the origin of the department of journalism.
Both are nearly the same age and the paths of their histories cross each other.
The paper's first name, University Kansan, was originally used by a paper that had a year's existence from 1899 to 1890. Competition drove it from the field and the name was not again used until 14 years later when the Semi-Weekly Kansan made its appearance on Sept. 17, 1904, the first University paper to appear more than once a week.
The following year, the title became simply The Kansan and this mast-head was used until September, 1910, when the title became the University Kansan, the bi-weekly issue having changed to a tri-weekly in May. 1908.
A daily paper had, for more than 15 years, been the goal of the Kansas publishers, but it was not until Jan. 16, 1912, that the first issue of the University Daily Kansan became a reality.
In 1904, students, enrolled in a reporting course in the English department, helped to supply news to the recently founded University Kansan, an independent student newspaper.
To bolster the work of the journalism course, volunteer reporters were recruited from the freshman rhetoric classes. With these reporters writing articles, other work in journalism such as copy-reading and editing was turned over to the sophomore students.
Later the Kansan was managed by the journalism students. It became the official newspaper of the campus with support pledged to it by students and faculty.
Before 1904 it was published by individual students. It was printed downtown until 1906, then on the Graduate Magazine press in Fraser hall.
By 1911 the department and the Kansas had been moved to its own building, the "shack." Rights to the exclusive use of the building were not obtained until 1923, although it was called the Journalism building as early as 1913.
The first Sunday Kansan was issued Sept. 18, 1923. The first summer session Kansan was in 1926, published on Tuesday and Friday.
Except for two tabloid issues attempted in 1924, the Kansan was a seven-column, four page paper until 1940.
Tabloid format was introduced Feb. 6, 1940; subscriptions to the Kansan as a part of the activity fee began in 1942; telephone news service with International News Service was used in 1942, and United Press teletype service was installed in 1945.
The University Daily Kansan's extra on D-Day, June 6, 1944, was among the earliest in the country.
Other wartime extras were issued on the death of President Roosevelt, V-E and V-J Day.
The purpose of the University Daily Kansan is the same as it was when the following statement was printed in the May 13, 1914, issue of the Kansan.
"The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life at the University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the news by standing for the ideals the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads; in all, to serve to the best of its ability the students of the University."
Picture Display, Old Editions Give Historical Highlights
A display of pictures and past editions of the University Daily Kansan, hung in room 205 of the new Journalism building, give a vivid sketch of the history of the School of Journalism and the campus newspaper.
Most striking of the past editions displayed is the April 1 edition in 1937 which announced in large type that the faculty had gone on strike.
The strike was called, the story says, because the legislature failed to grant a pay raise. At the end of the column is an insert calling the reader's attention to the fact that it is April Fool's day.
Also displayed are a series of very metropolitan-appearing extras. These were war years editions announcing the declaration of war, the European invasion, and V-E and V-J days.
The D-Day issue was on the campus news stands at 6 a.m. the day the announcement of invasion came over the Kansan's wire. The flash came at 2 a.m. and the staff composed almost entirely of women, worked all night to have the edition ready for morning.
Most recent of the extras are those announcing the resignation of Deane Malott as chancellor and the selec-
tor in D. Murphy as the new chancellor.
A one-page special edition dated March 3, 1943 has a banner head telling of the burning of the old frame Anatomy building. The fire started at 7 p.m. that evening and just two hours later the special edition of the Kansan was on the street with the news.
Women Students Edited Kansan When KU Men Entered The Service
Oldest issue of the Kansan displayed is an old issue of the Kansas University Weekly dated September 12, 1902. The paper features an article on the University's new chancellor, Frank Strong.
Pictures in the display show the story of the School of Journalism from the first days in the old "Shack" to the last few years. Old prints of the news, composing, and press rooms of the old building are in the
display.
Among the pictures is one of William Allen White when he spoke at a dinner honoring Prof. L. N. Flint who was retiring as chairman of the journalism department.
Pictures of Christmas parties and student-faculty mixers show that life in the old building was not all drudgery.
Council Meeting
Women students played an important part in publishing the University Daily Kansan during the war years. With most of the men in the service, the women had the job of getting the Daily Kansan out every day.
EDITING THE DAY'S COPY—The Daily Kansan copydesk at work during one of the morning rush hours. Sitting in the slot is Helen Lou Fry, journalism senior and assistant managing editor. Copyreaders (left to right) are: Jerry Renner, journalism senior; Jackie Jones, journalism junior; Joe Taylor, graduate student, and Jack Zimmerman, journalism senior—Kansas photo by Jim Murray.
Men began dropping out of school immediately following the declaration of war. By 1943 the few men in the department of journalism were in government training programs or were classified 4-F.
When the class of 1944 was graduated, there was not one man in the department. Twelve girls had carried the brunt of the work on the Daily Kansan. At one time there was only one man enrolled in journalism courses. He was too young to be in the service.
The rolls of 1945 show that there were 13 girls, one 4-F and two returned servicemen enrolled in the department. The class of '46, which was still a carry over from the war educated 16 women, and five veterans.
The GI's began returning in greater numbers in 1947, and classes started back to normal.
In the fall semester of 1943, only seven students were enrolled in the beginning reporting class which normally has from 25 to 35. Reporting II, the class which does the reporting of campus activities for the Kansan, had an enrollment of six. That meant six students had to write all the copy for the paper and
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The women, working under great emotional stress and strain, came through with flying colors. Probably the biggest job the women undertook was getting out an extra for the invasion of Europe.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 14, 2022
VENT
SHADOW
of Terror on
Saturday.
Following.
BRAZIL
bill for lunch.
2 students and a useful student.
of things,
of the past,
of the future,
the truth that
devices de
and directed
and a distance
February
George Rinehart, assistant professor of journalism, was the Daily Kansan adviser for the news staff. He and the staff realized that the invasion was to come soon, but no one was sure of just when and where. The staff made plans for the invasion issue weeks in advance.
"They'll be sickled when they see who 'tie.'
HIGH SCHOOL NEWS TO. BE A FEATURE
The news of the invasion at Le Havre, France, broke at midnight June 5. By 1 a.m., Mr. Rinehart and a half dozen girls were busily working on background material, editing and writing headlines.
TO BE A FEATURE
Daily Rakshan Will Have a Correspondent in Seminary School
A Department of Agriculture will be established following the award of the title of Professor at the Seminary School. The department will be headed by Prof. Dr. M. A. Shah, a senior professor at the Seminary School.
The university will welcome a new graduate to join the faculty. The new graduate will be given the highest degree in agriculture and be made an honorary fellow of the University.
Together with the five dignitaries announced above, the university will make the announcement of the appointment on Wednesday.
Mr. Rinechart made arrangements with the printers to have a skeleton crew on hand when the news broke. A map of Europe was drawn by Kati Gorrill, and a cut was made of it. Italy was shown on the map in case of the invasion starting there. Preparations were made to cut a hole in the engraving and insert an arrow
TO SAVE ON LEMONS
the morning.
The International News Service bureau in Chicago was to send any bulletins to the Daily Kansan office by long distance telephone, and at 3:30 a.m. the first one came... By 4:50 a.m. the presses started rolling, and before 6 a.m. the extra was distributed.
Some of the girls had prepared breakfast in the sky parlor of the Shack, and spreading newspapers on the copy desk, they broke their fast with scrambled eggs, bacon, toast and coffee. After breakfast, a few went home for a short nap before morning classes while others
Hersher S. Bailey, 10 Wid. St.
Citic Acid Law and Tech
Angeles, Cal.
THE DIB.
A fine story of a business man who "would have made good but didn't have in it." He was on Wednesday's daily news.
**Touge in Malaise Adresse**
Le Touge, 27 rue de la République,
50140 Paris, France. Tel.: +39 361 81 06 09.
E-mail: touge.malise@librairie-touge.fr
Institute of History, University
of La Roche Sur Yvette, France.
Tel.: +39 361 81 07 09.
E-mail: institute.history@uclouvain.fr
The Session of the College are given by the Board a method of examining that all students should attend their classes after they advance to that class. The student must be last during the period.
Want Faculty to Exempt a "2" Students from Spring Exams.
BROWN, JONNIE. B. U. 1938.
Christmas day brought a smile to
the homes of Prof. and M.C. C.
and at home and live at the University
in the appropriate spot showing the point of invasion.
SENIORS PETITION
AGAINST FINALI
Moved Bag
Brightness Battery
Ubiquitous batteries
On the go battery
Jewelry battery
Jewelry battery
Jewelry battery
Jewelry battery
Jewelry battery
TIMES
NEW
K. Edward A. Kowal, Jr. at K. Edward A. Kowal, Jr.
*Inductive educational change*
*in a new year; he and*
*englishly.*
**New Print**
**DIGITAL CENTER OPENS**
Students Taught in Vers
but Some of It Limped
Perceptibly.
(Continued to page 7)
IN GOOD OLD, TIMES
IT WENT BY RHYMES
*Ten thousand of old years ago,
the word of God was spoken by
David, by Moses, by King Solomon,
by Peter and John, by Paul.
The commonwealth a copy of
a Bible from the time of
Christianity, written by
George von Wiesbaden published
in 1850. The people needed the pastor
to be a servant to the Lord, and
the Athens minister was the
venerous wife of Israel's before he
went on the journey to Jerusalem.
The priest was also advised to all
his students not to attend any religious
leader there have any trouble with
his studies. He was named 'Ancient'
(Old Testament), 'Jesus', and 'John',
the 'Holy Ghost', and 'Israel'.
RECITAL COURSE OPENS
Three More Entertainment to be Given This Winter.
After & then
The writer insists under the header of the exposé of the department of security of the army, that they had been Tuesday evening with a piece meant to expose that there will be more significant thefts. There will be more money stolen. Walter Keenan, a memoirist, was 29, just revisit
BEST WISHES
Alabama Rush Fail Missing
Admiral Rush Fail Missing
Admiral Rush Fail Missing
The College was told last fall that the c
Were to the Chicago Ballet Theater.
Chairman C. H. Guevara, C.P. of the
Chicago Ballet Theater, League
of Dance Theatre of Chicago,
the organization of the Chicago
Ballet Theater.
KANSAS MAKING USE OF NEW HOSPITA
FIRST DAILY KANSAN PUBLISHED IN 1912
Thirty-four County Cases
Sent to Boca Raton
October 23.
student status of KARA HILLIARD (last name KARA HILLIARD) was given the DEEM TIME award and was awarded by the DEEM TIME office. The administration made sure that MIKHIL WAS PRESENT at this hospital when he passed away in this hospital hospital after his death.
Brown's
TOGGERY
830 Mass. St.
TO THE "J" SCHOOL IN THEIR NEW BUILDING FROM
The Kansan
Has Taken GOOD Care
Of Our K.U. Advertising
for over
20 Years
ALLISON
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941 Mass.
Phone 363
University Daily Kansas B—Page 5
Daily Kansan Serves As Lab For KU Journalism Students
Bv DON NIELSEN
The University Daily Kansan is a unique collegiate publication. In addition to acting as the official student news organ, the Daily Kansan serves as the laboratory for many of the journalism classes.
Students gather news, write stories, edit copy, makeup pages, solicit ads, layout ads, and take pictures all for a grade.
Students enrolled in six journalism courses work on the Daily Kansas as part of their classwork. The courses are: Reporting I, Reporting II, Editing II, Retail Advertising. The Editorial, and News Photography.
"The emphasis is on practical work, not theory," according to Victor J. Danilov, faculty news adviser, who supervises the students' work with R. W. Doores, business adviser.
"Purpose of the program is to prepare journalism students to step into newspaper jobs as smoothly as possible." Mr. Danilov explained.
The newsroom procedure is similar to that on most community newspapers.
The bulk of the work is performed
The sports and society editors, with their assistants, write and edit the material appearing on their pages. Usually the sports and society pages are made up several hours before the Kansan goes to press.
The Daily Kansan's business and advertising staff is headed by a business manager. Subordinate officers in the department are the advertising, classified, promotion and circulation managers.
The Reporting II students are assigned to campus beats, five rewrite hours a week, and special feature articles. As a result, they produce most of the news copy that appears in the Daily Kansan.
All the positions are awarded, directly or indirectly, by the Kansan board, the governing body of the paper.
The Daily Kansan's advertising is in retail, and most students in the Retail Advertising class.
The board consists of from 15 to 19 junior and senior journalism students whose job it is to decide on all major changes in the publication of the Kansan. For example, it was the board which decided on the changing of the "flag" or nameplate of the Kansan this semester.
BOLTON
Editing 11 students serve as copy-readers, editing and writing headlines for all stories except those that go on to the editorial, sports, and society pages.
VICTOR J. DANILOV
Reporting I students serve as copybys in the Daily Kansan newsroom. Editorials and interpretative articles are written by The Editorial class for use on the editorial page. Most of the photographs that appear in the Daily Kansan are taken by members of the News Photography class.
by students taking Reporting II,
Editing II, and Retail Advertising.
Students working on the Daily Kansas may put in as many as 20 or 25 hours a week of work for a course which gives three hours of credit. The reward comes in practical experience.
Staff members receiving credit for the Kansan work are the various editors and the business manager, advertising manager, and circulation manager. The staff positions on the Kansan are filled only with experience and thus giving students an opportunity to handle a variety of jobs.
The executive positions on the paper are filled by advanced students. These experienced students may receive college credit grades for filling these positions.
.
the officers selected directly by the board are the editor-in-chief, the managing editor and two assistant managing editors and the business manager. These officers select their own subordinates with the condition that they must be approved by the board.
The administrative setup on the Daily Kansan is divided into three departments—editorial, news, and business.
The news department is directed by the managing editor, who shares the five-day-a-week schedule with his four assistants, putting one of them in charge of the paper each day. This group supervises the copy-reading, editing, make-up and newspaper of the paper.
Besides subscribing to the wire service of the United Press, the Kansan gets the services of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Intercollegiate Press. It is also a member of the Kansas Press association, National Editorial association, and Inland Daily Press association,
The editorial division is under the direction of the editor-in-chief who supervises the editorial page with the help of two editorial assistants.
The paper tries to give complete coverage of campus activities and a roundup of state, national and international news.
MILTON PARK
The city editor and his assistants plan the news assignments and insure complete campus coverage. The telegraph editor, at his desk next to the United Press teletype, selects wire stories and edits and headlines them.
THE AD SIDE IN ACTION—R. W. Doores, business advisor to the Daily Kansan, (center) is shown discussing ad layout with two advertising students. They are Ted-Barbera, journalism senior and promotion manager, and Dick Hale, journalism senior and former business manager.—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Kansan Work Never Seems To End
BY BEN HOLMAN
The typical KU student may first look at an issue of the University Daily Kansan with a thought of expectancy, but one of the many students who take part in its management looks with a sigh of relief.
At the copy desk sits the managing editor of the day, assigning
headlines and giving direction for editing bf the stories by the copy-readers. He must also decide which stories will be used and where they will be used.
At the desk of the city editor, stories are being signed in and checks made so that no late developments are missed. A group of rewrite men are present to rewrite faulty stories.
Dummies of the society, editorial and one or two inside general news pages are sent to the composing room that afternoon. The remainder of the work is left for the next day.
From start to finish, publication o the paper is a matter of meeting one deadline after another. For each department, it is a continual rush to assemble and write the news of the day.
Work on the general news pages of the Kansan is also begun the day
An issue of the Kansan begins the afternoon before publication with the assignment of stories by the city editor to the reporters. These assignments are written in the tip sheet book, a loose leaf ledger. The reporter notes the story assigned to him and initials the tip sheet.
A visit to the newsroom at 8 a.m. the next morning will reveal a scene which seems like confusion. On the contrary, there is a systematic ordering of efforts to wind up the paper by the noon deadline.
Meanwhile, other departments begin work on their pages. Material for the editorial and society pages have a 3 p.m. deadline. Columns and other feature articles for the sports pages are also due at this hour. The remainder of the sports page has a 9 a.m. deadline on the day of publication.
The front uage is the lone page which has not been sent to the composing room by 11 a.m. It is not due until noon.
By 9 a.m. the sports pages and all other general news pages except the first and last must be at the composing room. This is also the approximate time for pictures to be sent to the engravers to be prepared for publication.
Dummies, or blank, columned sheets, duplicates of the paper are turned over to him from the advertising department. These dummies show the placement of ads in the paper. The editors indicate on these dummies the placement of the stories.
A telegraph editor comes on at 10 a.m. and selects from the United Press teletype, wire stories for the world news column on the back page. He also watches for "big" stories which might be given larger "play."
editor or one of his assistants, who has charge of the paper the next before publication. The managing day, begins editing and writing headlines for stories which are in early.
The front page is the lone page assistants checks the paper at the composing room after 1 p.m. to note mistakes and remedy difficulties. Press time is 2 p.m. and by that time the paper must be "locked up" and
sent to presses for printing.
The presses rolling, the students take that sigh of relief at the finished product and begin over again for the next issue.
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University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
KU Students Created Furor In 1908 By Exposing Lawrence 'Speakeasies'
By CHUCK ZUEGNER
The policy of helping journalism students gain practical experience by working on neighboring dailies stretches back some 44 years to the time when journalism was still an embryo course of studies at KU.
On Saturday, April 25, 1908, students of the department and members of the "Scoop club," a campus organization composed of former working journalists, published the Lawrence Daily Journal and started one of the biggest uproars ever to hit Eastern Kansas.
Under a striking block headline, "BEER SOLD HERE," the student writers reported a series of beer and whiskey "joint" that were then operating in Lawrence's East Bottoms against state prohibition laws.
In the left-hand column lead story, the students wrote "... An investigation reveals a condition of affairs concerning the prohibitory laws of Kansas startling in the extreme and much worse than the better class of people have any idea exists in the city."
It was found that a dozen places sold bootled liquor along New Jersey street between Winthrop and Henry, "The astounding aspect," reported the Journal, "is that the sale of booze is in constant daylight hours, and much of the business is transacted with university students."
The story proceeds to give a run-down of the places of ill-repute, pulling no punches in the matter of listing names and addresses.
In addition, said the Journal, there are numerous "nomadic boot-leggers who can be called upon to secure liquors at any hour. These people have been in Pennsylvania streets, the only place where the are lights burn all night."
Managing editor of the special edition was Jerome Beatty, who later became a noted writer in the East. Roy Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star, was city editor. The telegraph editor was Brock Pemberton, famous actor who died in 1948. Mr. Pemberton appeared in the play, "Harvey," in a visit to the campus shortly before his death.
The editorial in the same edition blasted the Lawrence administration for its laxity in cleaning up the vice-ridden joints.
It said "The illegal sale of liquor in Lawrence just now demands renewed vigilance and activity on the part of city and council officials. One city administration after another dump out the drink evil. Administrations in the past have been better than they are today.
"It isn't difficult to get any type of drink in Lawrence, and weekend excursions of groups from a small fraction of the student body have been entirely too common this year."
Editorial writers on the staff-for-
day were Joseph Murray, present
editor of the Lawrence Daily Jour-
nals, Arthur Riddle and Carl
Young.
Also commenting on the scandalous conditions was a 1,000 word poem by Harry Kemp, known as the "tramp poet" of the campus. The poem began:
The Bottoms now I sing, where whiskey flows
And two per cent makes life couleur de rose."
Before printing the scoop story, the student reporter canvassed city officials and printed their comments on the situation.
The mayor was evasive, the county attorney asserted that he knew nothing about the matter, and the police chief admitting knowing the police were operating but said the police force was too small to cope with them.
"We raided some of the joints," the chief said, "but they were empty at the time and we couldn't press charges."
Immediate reaction to the students' disclosure was widespread. The Lawrence World, on April 30, declared itself behind the students because it "knew the facts were true."
The Kansas City Times of April 27 reported the story in detail.
But the April 30 edition of the Lawrence Gazette "didn't consider it news as it all had been published 40 years ago."
The same evening the story was printed, police raided four of the
W. B.
ROY ROBERTS
liquor stores, arresting proprietors and customers and impounding the stock. Because many of the student witnesses would not return the following year (the "tramp poet" was already vacationing in Bermuda) the
trial was inserted on the docket for the district court for May 12.
In the meantime, the mayor publicly answered a letter in which he said "I have charity for such youthful indiscretion and am opposed to making unnecessary police court records which may annoy them in the future."
A local judge, owner of a house which rented to one of the boot-leggers, reportedly said that any student brought before him on charges of disorderly conduct would be sent to the rock pile for 10 days.
Before the trial, the big question asked on the campus was "Have you been subpoenaed?" More than 100 students had been subpoenaed and were witness fees for a party to be given before the end of school.
The students answered the officials' remarks with a long editorial in the Kansan and distributed it in downtown Lawrence. The Kansan castigated various city officials and once again called for a "dry town."
Most of them were disappointed, however, as the defendants changed their plea to guilty after only two freshmen testified that they had purchased whiskey. The defense attorney later said that the students had enough evidence to send the bootleggers to jail for 20 years.
The battle for justice was won. Some of the men who published that memorable edition have become in the world of journalism today.
Looking back through the old University Daily Kansans, one can find a series of modifications in the format and general appearance of the campus daily.
As early as 1912 the Kansan, then four pages, was only slightly larger than it is now, but with an increase in circulation came an increase in size.
Old Copies Of Kansan Show Numerous Changes In Format
For instance, it wasn't until 1940 that the paper was reduced to its present tabloid size and appearance.
The big change was made in 1917 when extra inches were added to both the length and width, although keeping four pages. That's the way it remained until February 1940, when it was cut down to the familiar size. The deficit in space was compensated for by increasing the Kansan to six pages.
The nameplate in those early editions was spread out in tall, block letters across the top of page one, a practice that remained until 1941 when "University" was set in smaller type and placed above "Daily Kansan." One year later the paper's name was put in script.
Glancing through the yellowed, pre-World War I copies, one notices a neat, easy-to-read page, although not yet in the tradition of modern journalistic techniques. Headlines were small and the absence of subheads gives an excessive condensed-type appearance.
At the beginning of this semester a new nameplate was designed, dropping the word "University" in the two and three column sizes because of space limitations.
In the early days of the paper, campus news dominated. During the
W. A. White's Journalism Library Finds Its Way Back To Kansas
By CHUCK ZUEGNER
One of William Allen White's most cherished possessions, his personal library of journalism, has found its way back to Ka'
The collection of 104 books, plus some correspondence and pamphlets, will be officially presented to the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information by George Matthew Adams, book collector and publisher, at the dedication of the new school. The volumes are stored in the Journalism building vault.
The collection includes personal books of William Allen White and first editions he sent to Mr. Adams. The flyleaves of his own works bear witty and entertaining messages to Mr. Adams in Mr. White's own handwriting.
Among the first editions are 17 authored by William Allen White including "Emporia and New York," "A Certain Rich Man," "God's Puppets," "A Puritan in Babylon," "Stratagems and Spoils," and "The Old Order Changeth."
Eight biographies and sketches of the late Emporia editor are numbered in the collection. Edna Ferber's "A Peculiar Treasure," David Hinshaw's "Man From Kansas," and "The Editor and His People," by Helen Ogden Mahin. In addition, there are two works by Walter Johnson, "William Allen White's America," and "Selected Letters of William Allen White."
The rest of the collection consists of works dealing with representative aspects of journalism. Mr. White must have spent many pleasant hours skimming through "The Ethics of Journalism," by Nelson
Antrim Crawford, or Stanley Walker's "City Editor."
The donor of the collection is president of the George Matthew Adams Service, New York City, a newspaper syndicate. For the past 20-odd years, Mr. Adams has contributed his popular column, "Today's Talk," to more than 100 newspapers throughout the nation.
A pioneer in the syndicated newspaper field, Mr. Adams made prominent such features as Kin Hubbard's "Abe Martin," Edgar Guest's "Just Folks," and "Just Kids" by Percy Crosby, who later became famous as the originator of "Skippy."
Mr. Adams also was the first to syndicate the health feature, and to suggest continuity in the comic strip with Ed Whealan's "Minute Movies."
Mr. Adams introduced a new technique into the journalism world by covering big events from the human interest standpoint. He published stories by such writers as Eda Ferber, Kathleen Norris, Mary Roberts Rinehart, and the incomparable William Allen White himself.
After being graduated from Ottawa university, Mr. Adams was employed by an advertising agency. In 1907 he began his publishing business in Chicago and later moved to New York. His alma mater conferred upon him the honorary degree of Doctor of Literature in 1940.
Besides his huge, 6,000 volume
collection of rare books, Mr. Adams collects etchings, and presented the works of Alphonse Legras, French etcher-painter, to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D. C. Other painters represented in his collection are Whistler, Lepere, Millet, Zorn, and Rembrandt.
Mr. Adams' library contains mostly first editions of his favorite writers, Joseph Conrad, Lafcadio Hearn, Henry D. Thoreau and Herman Melville.
He donated his valuable George Gissing collection to Yale university and to Tuskegee institute he sent the works of Paul Lawrence Dunbar. The contribution to the School of Journalism represents Mr. Adams' complete selection of books on journalism.
THE WELLSVILLE GLOBE
Wellsville,
1930s, some state and national news crept in, but news coverage was directed primarily toward campus activities.
The five-column, six-page edition published in the 1940s used a greater number of pictures than ever before or since. These years also saw a decrease in the space devoted to advertising.
The Kansan was never slow to develop its headline technique with the changing times. Its format has gradually evolved into the diversified, clean-looking paper it is today.
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University Press Operates A Modern Printing Plant
By DON NIELSEN
The University Press today is a far cry from the small print shop it once was.
In 1904, the University Press consisted of little more than a few fonts of type and one small press. Today the Press owns a modern printing plant with all the equipment necessary for putting out a daily paper, printing magazines, and publishing books.
The first publication of the Press was the Observer of Nature, which appeared April 1, 1874. This was a work by the Kansas Kaplanite, delegate which later consolidated with its rival, the Kansas review. This magazine was published until 1896.
But the Press was not really organized until 1904 when a group of alumni bought several fonts of type published by publishing the Graduate Magazine.
Each month, when the material for the magazine had been assembled, the type was set and the locked forms hauled downtown in horse-drawn drays to be printed. Since then, the publishers have taken their magazine, these "pioneers" heir to have the presswork done by printers elsewhere.
These alumni had set up their print shop in the basement of Fraser hall, and there it remained until 1911 when the equipment became the property of the University and was moved into the "Shack." Although that was more than 40 years ago, the University Press still re-
THOMAS C. RYTHER
I am a former member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. I have served as President since 1972 and as Vice President since 1980. I was also an Assistant to the President from 1965 to 1972. I will be remembered for my dedication to the university and my commitment to promoting its excellence.
celves man addressed to Fraser hall. In 1911 the University consolidated its courses in journalism into the journalism department. Prof. Merle Thorpe was named first chairman of the department.
ceives mail addressed to Fraser hall.
One of Professor Thorpe's first actions was to have the University buy the printing equipment of the Graduate Magazine from the group of alumni for $5,000. The equipment was moved to the Shack and used to put out the Daily Kansan.
Besides the Kansan and all types of printing required by the University, the Press publishes the Kansas Engineer, The Alumni Magazine, research papers and publications and a few books, which, if not handled by the University Press, would not be printed.
The superintendent of the University Press, Prof. T. C. Ryther, pointed out that the publication of the Kansan is by no means the only service of the Press.
None of these books are of the type which would make any publisher a fortune. They are printed by the Press, not for profit, but for their contributions to the various fields of science and education.
The Press has printed books on subjects ranging from anti-malaria
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952 University Daily Kansas B—Page 7
THE FILMING CENTER
SETTING THE KANSAN IN TYPE—Two of the composing room employees who are responsible for putting out the University Daily Kansan are Harold U. Fox, makeup man, and Guy M. Pennock, linotype operator and composing room foreman, left to right.—Kansan photo by Al Marshall.
work in various parts of the world to a beautifully illustrated book on Kansas wildflowers. Most of these books will sell no more than a few hundred copies.
At the end of this semester the University Press will have moved into the newly remodeled Journalism building. It will have two new presses and new surroundings. The
University Press has come a long way. More than 40 years ago it was a small typesetting shop run by a few ambitious alumni; today it is a modern printing plant, furnishing the facilities for journalism students to publish a daily newspaper and supplying printing necessary to the smooth functioning of the University.
Started In 1911
Kansan Printer Reviews 'Old Days'
Bv BOB NOLD
Students come and go but Guy M Pennock Sr., foreman of the Daily Kansan, just keeps working along.
Since he started to work here at the University many famous persons have come and gone. Among them are Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post; Peg Vaughn, Far East correspondent for United Press who was killed in Japan; Deane W Malott, former chancellor of Kansas university and now president of Cornell university; Henry McCurdy, assistant managing-editor of the Macmillan Publishing company, and Raymond Clapper, columnist who died in an airplane crash.
Mr. Pennock said Clapper and his wife walked from Kansas City to enroll in journalsm. He said Mr. Clapper worked in the printshop with him.
Many of the students who came to Kansas now have children coming to KU. "I hope to be retired before the grandchildren get here," he said.
"I was superintendent here when Thomas C. Ryther, present superintendent of the University Press, came to KU from Alton, Kan., as a freshman. I hired him as a student printer."
Mr. Mennock began working in the KU printshop April 7, 1911. "I first was in the office in the basement of Frusia, said, adding, 'We had one machine.'
From 1942 through 1947, Professor Beth was editor of the Journalism Bulletin, a quarterly publication of teaching aids sponsored by the American Association of Teachers. Journalism, founded in 1912 and superseded in 1951 by AEJ.
All officers of AASDJ this year are Kansasans. The are prof. Ralph Lashbrook, Kansas State college; vice president is Dean Burton and secretary-sr. assistant of finance and secretary-treasurer is Professor Beth.
"The following fall," he continued, "We proved into 'the Shack' and best working with the Kansan as a daily."
(Continued from page 3) members and one representative from each of these five publisher organizations: The National Editorial Association, the American Newspaper Publishers association, the Southern Newspaper Publishers association, the American Society of Newspaper Editors, and the Inland Daily Press association.
Mr. Pennock said the medical students were in this building before the journalism department moved
Journalism Center
in. "The medics were going to move to the museum," he said, continuing, "They had on their white coats and intended to parade their cadavorous subjects through a convocation crowd. However, Frank Strong heard about it and called off the parade."
Mr. Pennock remembers ex-chancellor Malott, a journalism student at KU, editing a column called "Plain Tales of the Hill."
Still another memory he has is that Lucille McNaughton, during World War I, was the first woman ever to be business manager of the Kansan.
"Students today seem to be taking more interest in the copy and the way they get it up than former students did," Mr. Pennock said. "They don't change things like the students did years back.
"Then each student had a different idea and wanted radical changes made. The students today are settling down and hitting the ball. The Kansan is much better today than it ever was."
At present approximately a dozen students are working in the print shop. "I try to keep the boys busy,"
"The students today will go as far or farther than those of the last couple of generations. They aren't as wild a bunch as they were in days gone by."
he said.
Mr. Pennock said he decided from the first that he wanted to be a printer, so he stayed with it. "I like the mechanical end better than office work," he said.
Mr. Pennock worked on the Lawrence Journal and the Lawrence World and on papers in Salina and Kansas City, Mo.
Women Editors
(Continued from page 4) got started on the regular daily issue.
The Zilch dinner was another event which the women had to take over. The Zilch dinner is comparable to the Gridiron dinner in Washington and is characterized by a character in costume, called Elmer Zilch, who acts as master of ceremonies.
In 1944, when there were only girls in the department, the character had to be changed from Elmer to Eleanor Zilch, portrayed by Betty Perkins. The first Zilch dinner was held in 1941.
The fact that the girls did a good job is illustrated by their career after leaving KU. Four girls were placed with press associations after they graduated while other made good in other lines of journalistic work.
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B—Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
News...
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Each issue contains stories and advertisements which are directed to YOU - the University of Kansas Student Body.
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Gift From State Printer
School Gets100-Year-OldHandPress
By SHIRLEY LYON
A 100-year-old hand press is one of the "new" adoptions to the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
The Washington hand press, as it is called, was presented to the school by Ferd Voiland Jr., the Kansas state printer. Until three years ago, it was used in the state printing offices in Topeka.
The history of the press dates back to 1827, some four centuries after Gutenberg invented and used the first movable type.
It was in that year that Samuel Rust of New York perfected the Washington press. Rusts's new machine was far more efficient and practical than other similar presses being used at that time.
Rust sold his patent to R. Hoe and company which promptly added its own improvements and manufactured more than 6,000 such machines, distributing them all over the world.
Printing experts claim that since that time there has been no hand- printing machine invented which
could surpass the Washington hand press in either principle or construction. It involves 11 distinct operations and can be operated by one man.
As the operator turns the handle at the side of the press, the bed levels from under the impression pad and in the supply, located at one end of the machine.
It then rolls back beneath the impression plate to be printed. Here the impression plate makes contact with the paper when pressure is applied by the hand lever.
Daily Kansan
BROOKLYN
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
STUDENTS ADMIRE OLD HAND PRESS—Five students are shown admiring the 100-year-old Washington hand press given to the School of Journalism by Ferd Voiland Jr., state printer. The students (left to right) are: Shirley Piatt, college sophomore; Rozanne Atkins, journalism junior; Jean Dawson, college sophomore; Bill Blair, college sophomore and Richard Clarkson, college sophomore.—Kansan photo
by Jim Murray.
49th Year, No. 95
1952
JOURNALISM'S PROFESSOR EMERITUS—One of the leaders in the development of journalism at the University has been L. N. "Daddy" Flint, 76-year-old professor emeritus of journalism. Professor Flint, former director of the department of journalism, started teaching journalism at KU shortly after the turn of the century. More than 1,200 students completed work in the journalism department during his reign—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
School Offers Home Ec Plan
He Wasn't Graduated From KU, But Journalism School Has His Name
The program was instituted by the William Allen White School of Journalism last year after long study by a home economics-journalism committee.
The University is one of the few schools in the country offering a degree in home economics journalism.
Job opportunities for women completing this sequence are in women's departments of newspapers, magazines, industrial publications, house organs, radio, television and public relations.
The combined sequence is actually a double major, but both the home economics department and the School of Journalism have altered the standard major requirements to provide a more practical and better balanced program.
Women desiring to take this sequence of courses enroll in the College during their freshman and sophomore years to complete requirements in English, the foreign languages, science and other basic courses and to take some home ec. courses.
In addition to the courses required of all students in the sequence, each one chooses an area of specialization in home economics in which to take nine hours of advanced study.
'Daddy' Flint Has Played Major Role In Journalism School Development
By MARY COOPER
The past and the present harmonize gracefully at the sight of an old roll-topped desk in the new and freshly painted office of L. N. "Daddy" Flint, 76-year-old professor emeritus of journalism.
According to Mr. Flint, "it looks like the devil in that setting." But there the desk stands as a link with the past, a past which developed a few journalism courses into a department of journalism and now a School of Journalism. In all, Professor Flint has played a large part.
He retired as chairman of the department in 1941, but continued teaching us in 1943. Since then Mr. Sullivan kept us by reading, and a big yard.
"There is always something around an old place like ours that needs repairing," he said. His latest accomplishment is the completion of a book on the history of journalism at the University.
Commenting on his birthplace, Mr. Flint said, "Thayer's only achievement was getting rid of me." He
When mentioning the high school, teacher and editor roundtables, the hall of fame, various services to the editors of Kansas and high school journalism contests—all of which are still in existence today—Mr. Flint contended that he didn't originate all of these ideas, but he got them from somewhere, although he didn't know where.
calls for the last book. He sent a copy of the manuscript to William Allen White who was quite concerned that he hadn't made it more forceful.
"I was grateful for the advice, but I didn't take it. The book was not argumentative but expository for a textbook," explained Mr. Flint.
In the summertime Professor Flint "gadded about" a great deal. He taught at the University of California at Berkeley, the University of California at Los Angeles and the University of Wisconsin.
In 1897 he was graduated from the University of Kansas with a major in philosophy. His first job was as a high school teacher in Olathe, but he resigned to become publisher of Manhattan Nationalist newspaper.
moved to Lawrence at the age of 15, and was graduated from Lawrence High school.
(Continued to page 8)
"I've had some grand times, and they've been awfully nice to me," remarked Mr. Flint as he modestly
Mr. Flint sold his half interest in the Manhattan Nationalist in 1906 and became the first full time KU alumni secretary. Soon he was asked to lecture in journalism. "I liked to teach, and my newspaper and teaching experience had qualified me for the job," he explained.
Professor Flint joined the department of journalism even before it had fully separated from the English department. He became chairman of the department in 1916, continuing as such for 25 years.
The professor is the author of several books, including "The Editorial," "Newspaper Writing in High School!" and "The Conscience of the Newspaper." Mr. Flint still gets
By JOAN LAMBERT
Sixty-five years ago there was a boy throwing his weight around KU politics named William Allen White. He never was graduated because a position as business manager on the ElDorado Republican seemed brighter than the prospects of meeting the University mathematics requirement.
Today a school of the University bears his name—the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information founded in 1945, the year after the Emporia editor's death.
William Allen White, author, liberal, and editor of the Emporia Gazette, was born Feb. 10, 1868, in Emporia. Seventy-six years later, after a career that took him from Kansas City and Washington, D.C., to Moscow and Haiti, he died in the town of his birth on Jan. 29, 1944.
Allen White, a doctor, his wife, Mary Ann Hatten, a former school teacher, and a 10-year-son home-steaded in ElDorado when pioneer Kansas was raw and young; when Indians, still a threat, came begging at back doors and the prairie stretched westward from the White's front door an unbroken sheet of grass to the Rocky Mountains 600 miles away.
The son of a "Stephen Douglas Copperhead" father who had courted his "black abolitionist" wife by mail, White grew up in an atmosphere of freely expressed ideas. His childhood and youth could be the story of any Kansas-born octogenerarian sitting on the benches around the town square today.
In ElDorado, Willie White was a member of the grade school aristocracy that dominated the many new children moving into town daily.
At KU he joined everything, even the band—although he couldn't read a note of music. He pledged a fraternity and learned how to maniculate student affairs.
This experience proved valuable to him when he later began to poke his nose into politics—local, state, and national. It went well with his profession of reporting and editing. As he drifted through smoke filled rooms, he gained an astonishing knowledge of the great nation of political horse-trading from the sad saga of the Bull Moose bolt in 1912 to sidelights on county clerks.
He was a fat, pimply-faced boy who, when not good enough to play on the team, kept score. He became the neighborhood "boss" by virtue of his wonderful barn equipped with a flying trapeze and other properties considered valuable to small boys.
Will White came to KU in the fall of 1886. He was only a fair to good student. He helped support himself by setting type in newspaper offices.
At the age of 25 he married Sallie Lindsay, a Kansas City school teacher. Two years later he bought the Emporia Gazette, then an obscure country paper, and moved to central Kansas.
With his new paper White embarked on a campaign opposed to
the populist movement being led by William Jennings Bryan. In the heat of editorial battle he wrote "What's the Matter with Kansas?" an editorial which brought him immediate fame.
Another editorial, "To An Anxious Friend," won him a 1923 Pulitzer prize. Other of his published works are "Woodrow Wilson, the Times and His Task." "Politics, the Citizen's Business," "Calvin Coolidge, the Man Who is President," and "Masks in a Pageant."
Rich Man," the latter selling 250,000 copies. His autobiography, familiar to all University students enrolled in Western Civilization, was written in 1937.
Still other books by him include "The Real issue," "The Court of Boyville," "In Our Town," "The Heart of a Fool." and "A Certain
A. H. W.
Although concerned with politics, White ran for public office only once. Incensed at the Republican nomination for governor of Kansas in 1924, he ran on an independent ticket and lost.
WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE
In 1930 he went to Haiti as a member of the Hoover commission to study the crisis there. He advocated withdrawal of American troops, which later was done. He traveled to Moscow in 1933 to report conditions there for the New York Times and the North American Newspaper Alliance.
As a member of the American Palestine committee in 1941, he advocated large scale colonization of Palestine by Jewish refugees. That same year, as a member of the Committee of Negro Americans in defense industries, he denounced discrimination against them in such employment.
C-Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
Used 68 Years - rack in the 1880s the only building on the campus was University hall (Fraser) housed most science and chemistry department was in the basement.
Old 'Shack' To Be Torn Down, Replaced By Library Wing
Bv SHIRLEY LYON
University students entered the "Shack," then called the Chemistry building, for the first time 68 years ago.
The building, second oldest on the campus, will eventually be torn down and an east wing to Watson library will be built in its place.
Now that the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information has moved to its new location, the "Shack" houses only the University Press and the Stenographic bureau.
When the Press and the bureau move to new locations, the two wooden annexes to the building will be torn down.
"Classes are no longer being held in the building." Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor said, "but the University Extension may use it this summer for institutes and conferences."
During its history the building has served as the home of the chemistry department, the School of Pharmacy, the laboratories of histology and human anatomy, and finally, the home of the School of Journalism
As the chemistry department en-larged, there was not enough room for all the students and there was no way to remove the odorous and injurious gases.
Prof. G. E. Patrick pointed this out to the regents and the state legislature sent a committee to the University to "smell" for themselves.
In 1833, they granted $4,000 with permission to use an unexpended interest fund of $8,000 for the purposes of the new building.
The building was designed by Haskell and Wood, architects. Its plan was then considered the best method for ventilation of a chemistry building.
Although it has no definite style of architecture, the use of materials and the shape of windows show a Romanesque influence.
The native limestone building cost $12,000. MacFarland and Son of Lawrence were the contractors for its construction.
Dr. E. H. S. Bailey, late professor of chemistry, who came to the campus the same year the Chemistry building was erected used to teach in it, building was built; no money was left to buy equipment to go in it.
Students used desks and apparatus from the old building until the legislature appropriated more money for the equipment.
The School of Pharmacy soon moved into the building with the chemistry department and by 1900 the classes were so large that they moved to new Bailey hall, erected that year.
After the chemistry department and the School of Pharmacy moved from the "Shack" it became the home of the laboratories of histology and human anatomy and was called Medical hall.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
Medical hall remained its name until 1923 when the last medical class moved away and the journalism department moved in and remained there till this year.
As the department of journalism grew, two wooden annexes were
THE SHACK IN ALL ITS GLORY—The University's second oldest building—the "Shack"—has been used for journalism classes for 39 of its 63 years of service. No longer used for classes, the-building eventually will be torn down to make room for an addition to Watson library.—Kansan film by Al Marshall.
built onto the west side of the building.
While the future journalists occupied the shack the doors hardly were closed. At almost any hour some student could be found working in the newsroom getting ready for the next day's Kansan.
The newsroom, with it high ceiling, was poorly lighted and had uncovered steam pipes running around the walls. These pipes popped and banged when they got steam in them
floor of the shack was continually vibrating from the running of the printing equipment down stairs.
Life Was Exciting
Back In The Good Old Days At The Shack
Amid all the plans for the dedication of the new journalism building L. N. Flint, professor emeritus of journalism, took time this week to think back over the years about the early days of journalism at the University.
By LORENA BARLOW
"When we first moved into the old journalism building in 1911 our predecessors left some of their equipment in our new quarters. In the sky parlor, cage after cage of white rats was stacked, clear to the ceiling," he said.
Professor Flint explained the rats had been used for experiments carried on by the department of medicine.
"We finally got rid of the rats, but the odors stayed with us for a long, long time," he stated.
Another event Professor Flint remembered was the custom, started in 1916 by the men, of wearing corduroy trousers to distinguish journeymen from street women joined the practice in 1919 by doning brown corduroy skirts.
and the heaters in the lecture room would also give the boiler-room effect when they were turned on. The
There was a punishment attached to the non-wearer of corduroy on the designated days if not good or sufficient excuse was offered.
Enlarger Believed Lost On Enterprise
Through all the years, he recalled, there was never a practical joker to equal little Willie Ferguson, a short, active young man. Like all students in those days, he wore string ties and high celluloid collars and parted his hair in the middle. Under
"In earlier days," Professor Flint said, "I think the students were a little wilder. They were full of pranks and iokes."
A Leitz enlarger on order for the new Journalism building is believed to have been part of the cargo lost when Capt. Henrik Kurt Carlsen's ship, the Flying Enterprise, sank in the North Atlantic last month.
The enlarger was ordered through the Mosser-Wolf camera supply store in Lawrence. Russell Mosser, part owner, said there had been a delay in the order and he has been informed that the sinking of the Enterprise is probably the cause.
those straight locks dwelt a very vivid imagination, Professor Flint said.
Willie went home for a short vacation back in 1911. During this time he spent every free moment thinking up an imaginary murder case, but Professor Flint denied he ever made such a demand.
With some hair combings from his sister, some chicken blood, and an old club, Willie went to work. He found an old abandoned barn where he carefully set the scene. He planted his props and spilled the blood around to indicate a body had
Whether it was a class assignment or not, Willie went so far as to set up an imaginary murder of his own.
Willie confessed when he discovered the situation was getting out of hand and the officials just let the matter drop.
When the caretaker discovered the situation the next day and called the sheriff, Willie just happened to be around. He wrote the stories that went all over the midwest. The Kansas City Star and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch were two of the many papers accepting the detailed tales of the search for the "murderer."
been dragged across the floor. Willie then made his exit.
After graduation William W. Ferguson kept in touch with Professor Flint. "Willie moved to California and continued to pull stunts. He always sent me the write-ups about his pranks." Professor Flint said.
"But Willie didn't learn to be a fake in my class in Ethics—that was his own invention," he added.
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Friday, Feb. 22, 1952 University Daily Kansas
C—Page 3
SCHOOL GETS PORTRAIT—A painting of William Allen White by Joseph Hirsch, New York artist, will be presented to the William Allen White memorial reading room today. The painting was given to the school by Harry Scherman, president of the Book-of-the-Month club. Mr. White was a member of the board of judges of the club for years.
W. E. H. WILLIAMS
By JOAN LAMBERT
27 Newspapermen In Hall Of Fame
Meritorious Service Honored
Meritorious service in the field of journalism has not gone unnoticed in Kansas.
The Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame, originally sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, and the department of journalism in 1931, honors the editors, publishers, managers and printers who have served the Kansas press well.
From 1931 until 1937 men were elected to the Hall annually, but since then selection has been more or less spasmodic. The last man
Nomination and election to the Hall are made by the Quarter Century club, an organization for Kansans who have spent 25 or more years in the field of journalism.
Since the Hall's inauguration in 1931 with six charter members, at least 21 other names have been added to the roster of famous Kansas journalists. Photographs of these men were hung in the news room of the old journalism building.
The six charter members were Col. Daniel Read Anthony, founder of the Leavenworth Times; Solomon Miller, founder of the Kansas Chief in Troy; Maj. Joseph Kennedy Hudson, founder of the Topeka Daily Capitol; Daniel Webster Wilder, editor of the Hawkway World and the Rocky Mountain Journal; Col. Marcellus Marellus Murdock, founder of the Burlingame Chronicle and the Wichita Eagle, and Noble Lovely Prentis of the Topeka Daily Record, the Lawrence Journal and the Junction City Union.
Nominations are made only of men dead for at least three years except for one man—William Allen White. In the case of the Emporia editor the rule was waived in view of his outstanding work in the field of journalism.
Other members of the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame include such men as William Elmer Blackburn, publisher of the Anthony Republican and later of the Herington Sun, Elmer E. Kelley who wrote the "Kansas Grass Roots" column in the Topeka Capital and published the Toronto Republican and the Garden City Herald.
named was Charles H. Sessions, managing editor of the Topeka Daily Capital, in 1945.
There are George W. Marble who rose from printer to reporter to publisher of the Fort Scott Tribune, and Leslie E. Wallace who published the Larned Tiller and Toiler and was reporter and Sunday editor on the Kansas City Star.
Seven Famous
Six of the portraits are of famous American newspaper editors. The other is of Prof. Edwin Hopkins, who taught the first class in newswriting at the University in 1903.
The six portraits are of Henry Watterson of the Louisville Courier-Journal, Horace Greeley of the New York Tribune, Charles A. Dana of the New York Sun, Samuel Bowles II of the Springfield (Mass.) Republician, William Rockhill Nelson, founder of the Kansas City Star, and Joseph Pulitzer, famed editor of the New York World.
Republican party leader William L. Townsley who managed the Great
Bend Tribute is included with William Yost Morgan, '85, publisher of the Strong City Republican, the Emporia Gazette and the Hutchinson News; Clark Conkling, founder of the Lyons Republic, and Moses Milton Beck, founder of the Holton Recorder.
Two former Kansas governors are listed in the Hall of Fame—Edward Wallis Hoch, governor 1905-09 and editor-publisher of the Marion Recorder and 1908 governor and editor-publisher of the Atchison Freedom's Champion.
Professor Flint said that early in the 1920's the journalism department decided to begin a collection of portraits of famous newspaper men. The man commissioned to do the job was Alfred H. Clark, an artist who
Frank F. MacLennan, former vicepresident and director of the Associated Press and publisher of the Topeka State Journal, is included as are John S. Glimore, publisher of the Topeka State Journal, and Benton M唐源, founder of the Walnut Valley Times, ElDorado, and founder of the ElDorado Republician.
Other honored editor-publishers are Edgar Watson Howe of Atchison Globe, Charles F. Scott of the Iola Register and Thomas E. Thompson of the Elk Falls Signal.
John R. "Jack" Harrison, publisher of the Beloit Gazette; Harold T. Chase, editor the Topeka Daily Capital; John C. Mack, manager of the Newton Kansan, and Bernard James Sheridan, publisher of the Paola Western Spirit and editor of the Kansas City Post complete the roster of names and faces.
Journalists' Portraits Are In Collection Of J-School
The portraits were assembled to a large extent by Prof. L. N. Flint, professor emeritus of journalism.
Seven full-color portraits painted more than 25 years ago will soon be transferred from the "Shack" to the new Journalism building.
DAILY KANSAN GETS NEW PRESS—A new $25,000 Goss Model E press has been purchased to print the Daily Kansan. Shown installing the press in the basement of the new Journalism building are Lowell Ross, Goss representative, and Dave Vequist, pressman.-Kansas photo by Jim Murray.
had just returned to KU from Colorado, and was doing free-lance work. Clark agreed to do one portrait each year.
"Clark had the ability," said Professor Flint, "to reproduce very good likenesses of these men from photographs which we provided him." The artist agreed to paint smaller portraits for approximately $25 each.
The portrait of Professor Hopkins was presented to the department of journalism by members of that first news writing class of 1903.
The portrait of William Rockhill Nelson was a large (36 by 24 inches), imposing picture, "This one," Professor Flint remembered, "cost $75, part of which was paid by the Kansas City Star."
Professor Flint thought that the artist had done a fine job of capturing the likeness of Joseph Pulitzer. Mr. Pulitzer's "disfigured" face shows different features on one side than on the other, the face of his face was that of an angel, and the other was that of a devil," Professor Flint said.
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—Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
Former Newspapermen Give KU Students Thorough Training In Journalistic Work
Bv CHUCK ZUEGNER
BY CHUCK ZUEGNER Practical experience coupled with book learning enables the nine faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information to give KU students thorough preparation for journalism careers.
Heading the school is Dean Burton W. Marvin, a member of the Chicago Daily News staff for nine years. He has served as reporter, copyreader, assistant city editor, cable editor and telegraph editor.
Dean Marvin taught at Northwestern university's Medill School of Journalism and the Columbia university Graduate School of Journalism before coming to KU as dean in 1948.
Dean Marvin received his bachelor's degree from the University of Nebraska and was awarded the Hitchcock scholarship to pursue graduate work at Columbia. He received his master's degree in journalism there in 1937.
Prof. Elmer F. Beth has been on the staff at the University since 1940. She served assistant professor, 1940- - associated faculty, 1946, and full professor since then.
He taught for 10 years at Idaho university and held the position of instructor at State College of Washington. Professor Beth received both his bachelor's and master's degree at Wisconsin university.
Professor Beth has worked on the Christian Science Monitor, Two Rivers (Wis.) Chronicle-Reporter, Monitowac (Wis.) News-Herald, Milwaukee Journal, Madison (Wis.) Capital Times, Moscow (Idaho) Star Mirror and the Kansas City Star.
professor of journalism at Missouri university where she received her bachelor's and master's degrees.
One woman, Associate Prof. Frances Grinstead, holds a place on the faculty. Miss Grinstead came to the University after serving as assistant
Miss Grinstead has worked on two newspapers, the Mexico (Mo.) Intelligencer and the Spartansburg (S. C.) Journal. She has one novel to her credit. "The High Road," published in 1945.
Starting as a copy boy on the Newark (N. J.) Morning Ledger, Associate Prof. Emil L. Telfel was later graduated magna cum laude from Notre Dame university. He received a master's from St. Norbert's.
While at Notre Dame, Professor Telfeil served as campus correspondent for the New York World. He was city editor of the De Pere (Wis.) Journal Democrat, a weekly, and later became public relations director and chairman of the journalism department at Loyola University of the South, New Orleans. During the
SAN ANTONIO
KU STUDENTS AT WORK—Five Students in Editing I edit copy under the watchful eye of Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism. Left to right are Emory S. Williams, senior; Philip G. Wilcox, junior; Richard E. Wilson, junior; David S. Arthurs, senior, and Clark Akers, junior.
MARCUS BERTONI
M. VASILIAC
ROBERT B. WENTWORTH
CALDER M. PICKETT
Professor Pickett was employed by the Salt Lake City Desert News, the Salt Lake City Tribune, and the Chicago City News Bureau.
last two summers he worked as assistant city editor and news editor of the Topeka Daily Capital and Leavenworth Times, respectively.
Another product of Northwestern is Assistant Prof. Calder Pickett, who formerly taught at Denver university and Utah State college, where he attended undergraduate school.
Thomas C. Ryther superintendent
He has worked as a reporter, rewriteman, copyreader, night city editor and assistant sports editor. He also has published a small weekly.
Handling the news advisory job for the University Daily Kansan is Assistant Prof. Victor J. Danilov, another experienced newspaperman. Professor Danilov worked on the Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, the Chicago Daily News, the Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator and the Sharon (Pa.) Herald.
Mr. Danilov was graduated from Penn State college and received his master of science degree at Northwestern university. He taught at the University of Colorado last year.
of the University Press, is an assistant professor and teaches courses in the art of printing.
He worked as head of the mechanical department of the Delaware Ledger, Newark, Del., and was printing instructor at South Dakota State college before returning to the University in 1940. Professor Ryther earned both his A.B. and M.A. degrees at Kansas.
Instructor in advertising is Robert W. Doores. Mr. Doores attended Pittsburg State Teachers college, receiving a bachelor degree in education.
He formerly taught printing at Chanute (Kans.) Junior college and high school and was co-owner and publisher of the Solomon Valley Tribune at Solomon, Kans.
Also teaching advertising is Robert B. Wentworth, assistant professor. He earned his bachelor's degree at Northeastern university and received a master of science in education degree at Boston university, 1936, and the University of Illinois, 1939.
Professor Wentworth has been an instructor in salesmanship, accounting, advertising and marketing at the University of Illinois, University of Vermont and Bridgeport (Conn.) college.
Congratulations
To
The William Allen White School of Journalism
"We wish you every success in your new building"
HUTSON HOTELS 1000 Rooms in Kansas, Missouri, and Colorado
HOTEL BROADVIEW WICHITA
HOTEL ELDRIDGE LAWRENCE Mike Getto, Mgr.
HOTEL STATE KANSAS CITY, MO.
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KANSAS CITY, MO.
Billy Hutson, President
R. C. McCormick, Sec.-Treas.
HOTEL BOULDERADO
BOULDER, COLORADO
MEADOW BROOK LODGE JACKSON, WYOMING Billy Hutson, Jr., Mgr. and Owner
C—Page 5
Four Professional Fraternities Have Chapters In School Of Journalism
By ROGER YARRINGTON
Four professional fraternities, two for men and two for women, have active chapters at the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
The Nu chapter of Gamma Alpha Chi, national professional advertising fraternity for women, was recently praised by Mrs. R. Dean Johnson, acting national secretary, as having made "more progress in the last two years than any other chapter."
Nu chapter was organized five years ago. Two years ago it had five members, now it has 25. The fraternity has pledged 16 women this year.
Gamma Alpha Chi was organized in 1920 at the University of Missouri, and the national headquarters are now in Kansas City, Mo. It is the only national professional advertising fraternity for women in the world. It is affiliated with the Advertising Association of the West and the Advertising Association of America.
The fraternity also cooperated with Alpha Delta Sigma, men's advertising fraternity, to sell Bibler books this fall.
The fraternity sold cards, wrapping paper, and note pads during Christmas season, and organized Christmas shopping and wrapping service to raise money.
Each spring members go to Kansas City to visit advertising agencies. They observe the plant and meet prospective employers.
Elizabeth Bull, senior, was youth delegate representing the national team at the international Admission conference held in London last July.
At their annual honors day banquet Feb. 7 Gamma Alpha Chi initiated as honorary members Miss Edna Marie Dunn, fashion illustrator for the Kansas City Star, and Mrs. Richard Zimmerman, coowner of the Kansas Color Press in Lawrence.
Officers for the Nu chapter are Patricia A. Brown, college senior, president; Dorothy M. Hedrick, journalism senior, vice-president; Elizabeth Bull, journalism senior, veterinary, and Shirley Grout, business consultant. Doores, instructor in journalism, is faculty advisor.
The Beta Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity for men, was the second chapter to be organized.
The aims of the fraternity are to raise the standards of its members, to recognize outstanding achievement by journalists, and to promote recognition of the fact that journalism is a profession. It is the oldest and largest professional organization in journalism.
Sigma Delta Chi was founded in 1909 at DePauw University at Greencastle, Ind. KU's Beta chapter was organized in 1910. The fraternity is now established in nearly all colleges which have a strong department or school of journalism
Officers of the Beta chapter are Charles Price, president; Ellsworth Zahn, vice-president and Richard Marshall, secretary. Lee Shepeard is editor of the Sour Owl. All are journalism seniors. Elmer Beth, professor of journalism, is faculty advisor.
Alan Marshall, journalism senior, was chosen to represent the Kansas chapter at the national Sigma Delta Chi convention in November at Detroit.
The chapter is the sponsor of the SISs Owl, official campus humor magazine.
The Epsilon chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, professional fraternity for women in journalism, will soon expand its membership. Invitations will soon be issued to eligible candidates.
Theta Sigma Phi is also planning for the Matrix dinner held every spring. The Matrix dinner is an annual project of every Theta Sigma Phi chapter, and the outstanding event of the year.
The linotype matrix is the official symbol of the fraternity and it is from this that the dinner derives its name. Each year an outstanding woman from this geographic area is recognized and honored at the banquet, along with the outstanding woman in the field of journalism. Ada Montgomery, women's
editor of The Topeka Daily Capital, was honored last year.
Outstanding women journalists are also recognized and honored by the national organization. Last year Nell Snead, women's editor of the Kansas City Star, was one of the five which were honored.
Theta Sigma Phi was founded at the University of Washington at Seattle. The purpose of the organization is to encourage women in journalism.
Officers of the Epsilon chapter are Mona Millikan, journalism senior, president; Anne Snyder, college senior, vice-president; Virginia Johnston, journalism senior, secretary, and Rita Roney Hunt, college senior, treasurer.
The L. N. Flint chapter of Alpha Delta Sigma, national professional advertising fraternity for men, will initiate new pledges March 6.
Alpha Delta Sigma was founded in 1913 at the University of Missouri. The L. N. Flint chapter was organized at KU as chapter 13 in 1942 and named in honor of L. N. Flint, professor emeritus of the
William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
The major objectives of the fraternity are to combine into one fraternal body workers in the field of advertising, gain greater recognition for college training for advertising, and to raise the prestige of advertising as a business and it's workers.
Activities of the chapter this year have included two discussions, one led by Ernest Pontius, advertising manager of the Lawrence Journal- World, and one by Arden Booth, manager of radio station KLWN in Lawrence.
University Daily Kansas
A convention is held by the national organization every other year. Dick Hale, senior, was the representative of the chapter last year at the convention in Cape Cod, Mass.
Larry Cotton, also of KLWN will discuss "Small Retail Ad Agencies" on March 20.
Officers of the N. L. Flint chapter are Frank Lisec, journalism senior, president; Ted Barbera, senior, vicepresident; William Taggart, senior, secretary, and David Arthurs, junior, secretary. Emi' L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, is faculty advisor.
Another Milestone Passed In KU Building Program
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
The dedication of the new Journalism building forges another link in the chain of construction projects planned for KU followi World War II.
"It has been necessary for the University to undertake a large-scale construction program," according to Keith Lawton, administrative assistant to the chancellor, "in order to meet the demands on it."
Construction planning has crystalized into the building, remodeling, and replacing program now in evidence on all parts of the campus.
Expansion has been the main idea. This was nearly impossible during the 1930s, Mr. Lawton says, for the "30s were "dry years" for construction. Inneeds were low, employmen-tion was poor, "stagnated", he says, "and little money was voted to the school from the legislature as a result."
The Faculty club was remodeled on a large scale, and a new addition
was built on the Watson library.
The war brought more students more funds, and consequently more demands upon KU. While post-war enrollment of veterans pushed enrollment figures to almost twice the average total of the '30s, the University began its program of expansion
Temporary structures were set up for classes and living quarters. The annexes to Strong and Lindley halls were built, as well as Sunnyside apartments.
University residences were acquired. Among these were Kanza, Sterling, Oliver, Hodder and Locksley No. 1 halls, and the Varsity house.
A Memorial Campanile, financed by contributions of students, faculty, and others, was completed and dedicated on May 27.1951.
The new Fowler shops were built. North College hall, a dormitory for all freshmen women except those living in scholarship halls and home residences, was built and put into operation beginning in fall 1951.
Three scholarship residence halls, Stephenson, Pearson and Sellards, are nearing completion. Stephenson, also occupied, while Pearson, also be men, and Sellards for women should be occupied in the near future.
Additions to the Student Union, which will expand it to about three times its present capacity, are in progress.
The framework for the new two million dollar Science building has been raised.
Pilings for the new KU athletic fieldhouse are being driven.
Mr. Lawton commented that "the University is in a period of growth. Besides these projects, there should be others. Most of the temporary buildings should be replaced," he said.
Other projects have been the construction of the information booth, and the completion of the new Memorial Campanile driveway.
THE J SCHOOL
GOOD LUCK
IN
THEIR NEW HOME
TO
We are happy that we could help them move from the "shack" to the "castle".
For all heavy moving, call us.
Hetzel Heavy Haulers
Phone 158
735 New Hampshire
SALVATORE
SIZE CREATES A PROBLEM—It was necessary to use some imagination in getting the new typography equipment into the second floor lab in Journalism building last week. Many of the crates had to be hauled through a second floor window because they were too heavy and too large to be carried up the stairs. R. W. Doores, journalism instructor and Park Hetzel II, local trucking operator, (left to right) direct the operations from the second floor window as a workman moves a crate into position. Kanen拍 by Jim Murray.
moves a crate into position.—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
It's War
between the classes!
Will the Queen of the Junior-Senior Dance be a
Freshman?
Sophomore?
Senior??
Your Ticket Is Your Vote.
MARCH 8
Dance to the Music of
AMERICA'S Greatest VOCAL STYLIST
Tony PASTOR
AND HIS SENSATIONAL
ORCHESTRA
COLUMBIA RECORDS
C—Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
---
Mt. Oread To Fame
KU Journalism Graduates Prominent In All Fields Of Communications
The University today can boast of many noted figures in the
journalistic world. ♦
Notables who once attended journalism classes at the University include such prominent journalists as Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post; Doris Fleeson, columnist; Chester Shaw, executive editor of Newsweek; and Robert Heid, editor of the Country Gentleman, and Roy A. Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star.
Others include Jerome Beatty,
free lance writer in American, Col-
lors, Reader's Digest, Saturday
Evening Post and other magazines;
William Dickinson, city editor, Phil-
delphia Bulletin; Dan Anthony III,
eavenworth Times; Clyde M. Reed,
publisher, Parsons Sun; Herbert
leyer, publisher, Independence Reor-
ter, and Arthur L. Crookham,
associate editor Portland Journal.
Dolph Simons Lawrence Daily Journal-World; Louis Lacoss editor, editorial page, St. Louis Globe Democrat; and Llewellyn White, national affairs editor, the Reporter magazine, are graduates.
Earl J. Johnson is vice-president and general news manager of the nited Press. Merton K. Akers is assistant general news manager of EP, John D. Montgomery is publisher of the Brazil Herald in Rio de Janeiro and publisher of the Junction City Union.
Lester Suhler, subscription manager, Look and associated magazines; Floyd Hockenhull, editor and owner, Circulation Management; Cargill Sproull, advertising manager, Burrough Adding Machine company, and Burt Cochran, Pacific Coast manager, McCann Erickson Advertising company are graduates.
Others are E. F. Hudson, vicepresident, Benton and Bowles; Frederic W. Giesel, business manager, Cincinnati Post; Olive Ewing Clapper, magazine writer and radio commentator; and Helen Patterson, writer and professor of journalism at Wisconsin.
James L. Barrick, national advertising manager, Kansas City Star; Bert Brandt, photographer in world journalism with Acme newspapers; Herbert Little, director of information U.S. Labor department, and Wright Morris, director of development, Newsweek magazine, are graduates.
Elizabeth Baker, professional name, Carol Lane, is women's travel director for Shell Oil company and Wesley W. Stout, former editor of
Deane W. Malott, former chancellor of the University is now president of Cornell university. Dale O'Brien is a partner in Howard G. Mayer and Dale O'Brien, Public Relations, Chicago, New York and Hollywood.
Saturday Evening Post is now director of public relations, Ford Motor company.
Alfred G. Hill, Hill publications in Chester, Pa., New Kensington, Fa., and Oak Ridge, Tenn.; Oscar S. Stauffer. Stauffer Publications; Edwin Abels, publisher, Lawrence Outlook and past president of National Editorial association, and Mac F. Cahal, publisher General Practice magazine are graduates.
James A. Bell, foreign correspondent covering the Korean war for Time magazine is a KU graduate. Alvin McCoy is Kansas correspondent to the Kansas City Star, and Fed Briley of the Pittsburgh, Kan. Sun and Headlight, and for the last two years one of the Pulitzer prize judges.
Bill Downs is a World Wide reporter for CBS; John Cameron Swayze is a newsman on television; John Patt. president of operations, WGAR, Cleveland, WJR, Detroit and KMBC, Los Angeles.
PATRICIA CUNNINGHAM
SCHOOL SECRETARY—Popular and helpful figure at the School of Journalism is Mrs. Gladys C. Whalen, secretary to the dean. She has been with the school for the last year.
Don Davis, president, WHB, Kansas City, Mo.; Richard Harkness, news commentator, and Brewster Morgan, creator of such programs as "Report to the Nation," director
of U.S. propaganda station following troops across Europe, and radio and television script writer in Los Angeles are graduates of the scl.
Many other graduates are in the field of advertising, circulation and miscellaneous. Milton L. Peek, advertising manager, Ladies Home Journal, Edward H. Kimball, Parade publications, are KU graduates.
Paul Harrison is director of public relations, Union Pacific railroad; George Hollingsbury is president of George Hollingberg, Chicago and New York radio and television representatives and John Henry is director of public relations for the Des Moines Tribune.
Many graduates or former students are deceased, retired or inactive.
Among these are: William Allen White, editor, Emporia Gazette; Brock Pemberton, Broadway play producer; Marvin Creeager, retired editor; Milwaukee Journal; Raymond Clapper, columnist, and Gertrude Hill Springer, retired editor, Better Times.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Wesley W. Stout, former editor,
Saturday Evening Post; Miles W.
Vaughn, Far Eastern correspondent
for the United Press and Florence
Finch Kelly, reporter on Boston
papers, New York Times and other
papers, who probably did more than
any other person to break the tab
against women in journalism.
Gemmell's Cafe Steaks chops Regular Dinners ON THE HILL
William Allen White School of Journalism Building
WILLOW ALESH WHITE SCHOOL C. COUNTY JUPITER
General Construction Remodeling By
Constant Construction Co.
Lawrence, Kansas
Radio, Television Programs Expanded By University
By BOB NOLD
The University's radio and television program took a step forward during the past year with the establishment of a separate University Radio division directly responsible to the chancellor.
R. Edwin Browne was appointed
director of the University radio station KFKU, which previously had been under the direction of University Extension.
This new division of radio is responsible for operating KFKU and the new M station, KANU, and for development of television at the University.
C—Page
An inter-departmental committee has proposed to the chancellor the establishment next fall of a complete radio sequence leading to a comprehensive science journalism. The curriculum is now being completed.
As part of the expansion program, the University has doubled KFKU's door space with the addition of two new audio studios and seven new offices.
Construction is expected to begin about March 1 on a new transmitter building which will house the FM and AM transmitters. The FM radio equipment was a gift of John P. Harris, editor-publisher of the Hutchison News. Now he is chairman of the Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. Mr. Harris is president of the William Allen White Foundation.
The radio tower, which was a part of the gift, has already been erected west of the campus on University property adjacent to the Old Pioneer cemetery. The transmitter building also will be erected on this site. The FM station is expected to go on the air about July 1.
The FM station will have a full-time license with the federal communications commission. This license will permit the University station to broadcast 24 hours a day. Mr. Browne said the station will broadcast only six hours a day in the beginning.
For operation of the FM station, the University is purchasing a $7,000 library of musical recordings. One of the rooms in the expansion program is being especially equipped for storage and use of these recordings.
This room includes turntables as a means by which recordings can be auditioned by program planners and builders.
Two offices in the new building are designed especially for writers and program builders and designers.
"Throughout the years," Mr. Browne stated, "KU has been restricted in broadcasting activities by the number of hours it has been on TV." The FM station will at last make it possible for KU to come into its own.
KU will be able to serve the people of Kansas," he continued, "as other state educational institutions served their residents for many years."
KFKU programs originate on the University campus; most of them in studios in the engineering experiment station. Programs are sent on telephone lines to the WREN transmitter in Topeka.
KFKU shares 1250 kilocyles with WREEN and rents the use of WREN's transmitter the hours the University station is on the air.
The University recently received delivery of a new AM transmitter. It was installed in the new transmitter building with the FM transmitter.
"The University intends to use this new transmitter for sending AM programs direct from Lawrence to KFKU listeners." Mr. Brownne said.
"The University also expects eventually to be broadcasting on an expanded schedule in AM," he added.
In addition to the expansion of radio broadcasting, KU has indicated a desire to belong to a national network of educational television stations which will produce and exchange their own shows.
Several years ago, recognizing the import of television as a tool of education, the chancellor of Kansas university took steps to study how this tool might be used by the University.
Mr. Browne said that with the coming of Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, television activities at KU received new impetus.
PETER C. MAYER
R. EDWIN BROWNE
In the meantime, the FCC had tentatively allocated channel 11 for a non-commercial educational television station in Lawrence, Kan., but requested postponement of the filing of applications.
Chancellor Murphy had been the dean of the KU medical school when it became the first school in the country to operate closed circuit television on a regular basis for the purpose of classroom instruction.
"The FCC is expected to lift the freeze on television about March
KFKU Presents Varied Schedule
KFKU, the AM radio voice of the University of Kansas, provides many programs of education, informational and audul tural value to its listeners
In the afternoon, most of its listeners are children in elementary classrooms. KFKU has designed a series for them called Jayhawk Junior Classroom. On request, the University station sends out a teacher's manual which explains the programs and how they can be used in the classroom.
On Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, KFKU gives a 15-minute dramatic program and on Tuesdays and Thursdays, it presents a half-hour show for children.
In the evenings, most of KFKU's programs are designed for a family audience and consist largely of classical music.
KFKU began a program this year especially for studentu. It introduced the KU Cavalcade of Hits, a compilation of the most popular songs at KU as determined by a campus-wide postcard survey.
R. Edwin Browne, director of radio, said the program gets a good sampling of the University's organized houses.
Mr. Browne said KFKU will introduce a new feature on this program soon. One KU student will be presented each week as an entertainment element of the show.
KU Cavalcade of Hits presents not only the hit songs but also the recording artists.
In the future, the station management expects to have journalism students give newscasts regularly. It also expects to present plays featuring students enrolled in the department of speech and drama.
Another aspect of KFKU is the workshop it provides for students interested in radio as a vocation or avocation. The University station has organized the Radio Players for this purpose.
The Players act in two of KFKU's dramatic productions each week, "The Flying Carpet" and "Prairie Footprints."
KFKU also cooperates with the KU athletic department in operating a sports service for other stations in this area.
1. " Mr. Browne said, adding, "At that time, KU expects to learn if the FCC has permanently allocated this channel to Lawrence.
Mr. Brown said the University plans to apply with the FCC to operate a television station on channel 11 "as soon as practicable."
The board of regents, which is the governing body of the University authorized the University to apply or license to operate a television station.
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952 University Daily Kansas
"Television, which has been called an expensive instrument, is actually one of the most inexpensive instruments ever devised for the dissemination of education," Mr. Browne declared.
"It is difficult to conceive of a less expensive method of pushing out the walls of the University classrooms to an area as large as the state." he continued.
Engineering surveys have been prepared. A University committee on television has been formed. Mr. Browne said plans are going forward to secure the assessment of this station soon after approval is granted by the FCC.
SUNDAY
MEMBERS OF THE KFKU Radio Players rehearse "The Yeoman of the Guard" in the EES radio studio. Mrs. Ruby LeNeve Motta, writes, directs and produces the shows. The players (left to right) are Caroline West, college sophomore; Laura Price, education senior; Dorothy O'Connell, Dennis Henderson, John Eaton, Jerry Knudson, college sophomores, and Winston Deacon, engineering freshman.
He also said television could bring the great resources of the state universities into the homes of every
citizen in the state in a very personal way.
"The University professor comes as near to the viewer as if he were sitting in the same room," he said.
Ye Know By Cracky
Back in the days when Hank Maloy gave birth to the first Jayhawk, a prolific old bird with a heteronomous progeny as numerous as smoos and as varied as that of a modern social reformer illustrating her theories; during the days when Herb Flint was a suspicious character because he came from a town where a Socialist lived and when John Henry always had a good story; when Jack Greenleese shocked the faculty wives with his yarn about the ancient vessel unearthed on Mt. Oread; at the time when prim John Madden worried about Kansan finances and Paddle Palmer sang songs he did not learn in Sunday School; the gang around the Journalism department thought about the same things you do, including, getting a job. Those days it was officially decided in the class room that a weekly newspaper could not exist in Lawrence. The Profs were wrong. They are wrong again unless they tell you that income in a newspaper office must exceed expenses. Your employer must be able to sell your work at a profit. New fixtures in the School of Journalism cannot sharpen your intellect, the product you have to sell. YOU must do that and you alone can keep it up to date and worthy of wages.
Ed Abels, '14 and Marie Robinson Abels, '19, two grads who proved the Profs were wrong, at least one time, extend their best Wishes for your success. Come see us at
P. S. Look what Hank did—
k
The Lawrence Outlook
1005 Mass. St.
Phone 542 for printing
1
C—Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 22, 1952
Here's One Professor Who Practices What She Teaches
By BOB LONGSTAFF
Teaching on the Hill, handling extension classes and doing freelance writing keeps Miss Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism, on the go most of the time.
She admits, however, that writing is her first love. She won her first prize money in a poetry contest when she was 13 years old and has been writing ever since.
The poem, "The Fairies' Fourth of July," won first prize in the poetry division of a Woman's Home Companion contest for children.
Even before that, Miss Grinstead had won books and boxes of watercolors from magazines for which her father wrote. By the time she was 19, she had sold her first short story.
She actually began writing at seven when her father got his first typewriter. "We learned the hunt and peck. system, together." Miss Grinstead said. "And I still use it," she added with a smile.
In 1945 her first novel, "The High Road," was published, and her articles have appeared in more than 50 magazines and newspapers. At the present she is working on a novel of college life.
"The High Road" is a humorous story of a Missouri Ozarks preacher. The scene is laid in fictional Knob county. The book was written entirely during vacations in such varied places as an Ozark resort cabin, a Michigan cherry farm, and a backyard studio built around an old fashioned summer house.
By the time Miss Grinstead started to school, her father was established as a writer, and it was then that she announced to_her grandmother that she was going to be a writer.
Miss Grinstead received the bachelor of arts and the master of arts degrees from the University of Missouri. She also attended the Breadloaf School of English at Middlebury, Vt., famous as a summer school of writing, on an Atlantic Monthly scholarship.
She came to KU as assistant pro-
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
MISS FRANCES GRINSTEAD
fessor of journalism in 1948 and was
made associate professor in 1951.
Following her years at MU, she worked on two newspapers within two years, the Mexico (Mo.) Intelligence and the Spartanburg (S.C.) Journal. She taught at MU for 15 years and came to the University in the summer of 1948.
Two-thirds of her time is devoted to classroom work on the Hill. The other third is spent teaching extension classes in writing in Topeka, Kansas City, Leavenworth, Wichita, and Lawrence.
Miss Grinstead teaches her extension and her Hill courses in a practical way, having the students keep in mind a market for sales as they write.
Sales in her classes while at the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information have been between $2 and $300. Students in her extension classes also sell
Miss Grinstead likes to sit back and tell of her students' achievements.
stories to national magazines and newspapers.
One of her students, a housewife,
Mrs. Ina Jahr, 1428 Ohio street, first
enrolled in her Lawrence extension
class two years ago. Mrs. Jahr's
sales and prizes during the past year
have amounted to $600.
Another student, Miss Margaret Mae Maness, now a journalism teacher at Haskell institute, enrolled in the first magazine writing course that Miss Grinstead taught at KU. Miss Maness has made more individual sales than any of Miss Grinstein's students. Selling to many markets, Miss Maness keeps her manuscripts going, sending one out as many as 28 times.
Miss Grinstead also is faculty sponsor for Theta Sigma Phi, women's professional journalistic fraternity. In spite of all these activities she still finds time to write features for the Kansas City Star and to write for professional journalism magazines.
Flint's Role In Journalism
mentioned some of the dinners held in his honor. One in particular wa in 1937 when he gave the KU alumni address at commencemen and was presented a watch and radio by members of the journalism department.
A
Another special event was in 1941 when Mr. Flint was about to retire. A testimonial dinner was given in his honor with Raymond Clapper as a special guest and William Allen White as toastmaster, Mr. Clapper flew from Washington just for the event.
"It meant more to me than the Diamond Jubilee which started the next day," reminisced Mr. Flint with blue eyes bright behind horn-rimmed glasses.
"Do you wonder that some teachers fall heir to egotism," said Mr. Flint after speaking modestly of the former student who flew from Berkeley for the dinner. When Mr. Flint suggested that they get together the next day after the activities, the former student said he had to go
from page 1)
back—he'd just come for the dinner.
There were headaches a plenty in his 35 years of service. One special headache occurred when a new boy came to class, the lecture that day concerned political systems with an emphasis on Communism. A week later Mr. Flint received some Tulsa newspapers containing a headline editorial, stating "Kansas teacher is Communist."
"While I was worried about it, nothing ever came of it," smiled Mr. Flint. "No one paid any attention to it, except me."
To take the place of their three grown sons, the Flints now have three college students living in their home.
This friendly, congenial old gentleman has the distinction of being the dean of all journalism heads in the United States in years of service. During his 35 years of service, more than 1,200 students completed work in the journalism department at KU.
Congratulations
on your new move
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Congratulations
on your new Journalism Building!
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ASC Calls Special Meeting On Reorganization Plan
On the petition by 12 members of the All Student council, Christine Johnson, secretary of the ASC, has called a special meeting for 8 p.m. Thursday to reopen discussion on Council reorganization.
The petition is to counteract an ASC action to "cease discussion on reorganization" made at its meeting Thursday.
The ASC action to cease discussion came at the end of more than an hour of deliberation over the merits of a reorganization plan proposed by the president, and his committee. By a vote of 10-9 the action passed.
It was on this narrow voting margin that the new petition was drawn up. It states: "By the narrow margin of one vote we refused the students the right to vote upon this (re-organization) matter."
The petitioning ASC members also felt that "the consensus of opinion after the meeting seemed to be that reorganization of the political scheme is desirable."
Council went through all the sections of the proposed bill, first discussing and then voting on each. when it arrived at the section which would change the election of representatives from a school to a district-residence basis, there was considerable discussion.
After several motions to amend the proposed section, the whole section was put up to a vote, and was
In other actions, the ASC:
defecated. The motion to cease discussion followed.
1. Voted to shift the student football section to extend next year from the north 35-yard-line to the south goal-line. The section will be student-controlled under the direction of a special ASC committee.
2. Declared a vacancy in district III (Schools of Business, Fine Arts, Education, Pharmacy and the Graduate school) upon the resignation of Bob Casad.
3. Learned that a stop sign will be put on traffic zone 8, and "F" zone on Lilac lane will be open for free parking.
4. Voted to authorize a committee headed by Woody Davis, college senior, to head a coming campus blood donor drive. This committee is to present a plan to the ASC at a later date to be acted upon regarding finances.
Theater To Screen Game; Tickets To Go On Sale Soon
5. Appointed Will Adams, graduate student, as chairman of the student labor board. His committee will be Robert Reed, college sophomore; Alan Nanninga, business junior, and Walter Brown, graduate student.
Tickets for the big-screen televising of the March 7 Kansas-Kansas State game at the Granada theater will go on sale "Thursday or Friday," J. D. King, city manager of the Commonwealth theaters, said.
Mr. King "pretty well decided to have a general admission advance sale" of tickets by last night.
The Granada will become the first small-city theater in the world to present large-screen televising, before have has theater television been displayed in a city of less than 100.000 population.
The Granada's 20-foot television screen, the latest one produced by the Radio Corporation of America, is the same size as the screen used for film productions. Complicated and costly equipment will be used to bring a sharp televised image on the screen. It will frequently bring a closer view of action than that seen by spectators on the front row at the game.
The theater will pay the KU Athletic association a percentage of the box office receipts for rights to the
televising. Athletic Director Arthur Lonborg was first approached about the televising several weeks ago when it was apparent that the Kansas State game would be a sellout.
Theater representatives at first proposed to bring special television cameras to Hoch and send a signal from the top of Mt. Oread to the roof of the theater.
However, when WDAF-TV arranged to televise the game throughout this area, Mr. Lonborg agreed, after financial arrangements were met, that the Granada could use this broadcast for its "premiere" on the giant new screen.
An order for more than 200 of the theater's 900 seats has already been received by the theater from followers of the Wildcats in Manhattan.
Education Senior Wins Buehler Oratorical Contest
Wilbur Goodseal, education senior, won the annual Lorraine Buehler Oratorial contest held Thursday in Strong auditorium.
Kent Shearer, first year law student who was master of ceremonies, the honor won by Goodseal threefold.
First, he captured the top prize of a set of Encyclopedia Americana. Second, he won the right to represent the University in the Missouri Valley Forensic league contest which will be held March 27 at KU. Third, he won the prestige that goes with being the University's top orator.
The winner was selected by five judges on the basis of one point for a first place vote, two for a second place vote, and so on. Goodseal's 11 points gave him the lowest total and the victory.
Goodseal's speech was on "Second Class Citizenship." In his closing statement, he said what Erwin Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, repeated Friday at an all-student convolution. He contended that if America falls short of its democratic ideal—that all men are created equal and have the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
Second place went to William Van Almen, business junior, and third place to Dick Sheldon, college sophomore. Van Almen won $20 and Sheldon $10.
H. T. U. Smith, associate professor of geology, returned this weekend from a two week trip to Washington, D. C., where he attended Navy and Defense department conferences on aerial photography.
Judges for the contest were F. J. Moreau, dean of the law school; R. M. Davis, professor of law and Dixon Don, Kim Griffin and Richard Schieflerbusch, assistant professors of speech.
The Navy conference on interpretation of aerial photography began Feb. 14 and was held in the Pentagon building. At the Defense department symposium held a few years ago, the team uncovered Photo Interpretation of Terrain" before the research and development board.
happiness and some other menacing world power succeeds, we all may be paying the price of second class citizenship.
Professor Attends Military Conferences
Returning home Professor Smith gave an invitation lecture at the University of Chicago on "The Sand Hills of Nebraska."
6. Learned that all pep club members will be allowed to attend all the remaining home basketball games. A report from the traditions committee also said that the idea of having drum majorettes had not been approved by the Chancellor. Cheerleaders' school is scheduled to begin after the end of basketball season.
7. Approved a recommendation from Lawrence Kravitz, head of the student housing committee, stating that the committee only investigate those residence facilities which are reported "unfavorable" by students.
8. Learned from Dean Werries, ASC treasurer, that a $1,134.57 deficit of the 1950-51 Jayhawk had been "taken care of" by the Jayhawk fund. Werries also set a hearing of Mortar Board for 4 p.m. Friday.
AWS To Elect On Wednesday
Election of Associated Women Students officers and senate members for 1952-53 will be held on Wednesday. All women students may vote on presentation of their ID cards at the polls in Fraser hall and Strong rotunda.
Polls will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Positions open are president, vicepresident, treasurer, secretary and two representatives to the All Student Council, one independent and one Greek. The candidate receiving the second highest vote for each office will become a member of the senate as will the elected officers.
Jerry Hesse, college junior, and Orinine Gray, college sophomore, are running for the presidency. Both are likely to last one semester on the AWS senate.
Anna Jean Hollyfield, education junior, and Diana Foltz, pharmacy sophomore, are candidates for the vice-presidency. Both have served at least one semester on the AWS House of Representatives. The AWS vice-president acts as moderator of the House.
Candidates for treasurer are Sydney States, college freshman, and Norma Lou Fallette and Nancy Canary, college sophomores.
Candidates for the position of secretary are Sandra Puliver, Winifred Meyer and Althea Rexroad, college freshmen.
In 1945-46 he served as a public member of the regional war labor board, and for two years he was chairman of the industrial council for the Kansas Chamber of Commerce. During the war he served as liaison man between Sunflower Ordinance Plant and Lawrence.
Women running for Greek ASC representative are Donna Arnold and Marilyn Hawkinson, college sophomores, and Carolyn Oliver, college junior. Independents running for ASC representative are Victoria Rosenwald and Mary Betz, college sophomores, and Joan Lambert, journalism junior.
Dean Frank T. Stockton of University Extension has been named as an alternate member of the ninth regional wage stabilization board.
Dean Of Extension Named To Board
Palmer To Give Violin Recital Today
Fred Palmer, fine arts senior,
will give a violin recital at 8 p.m.
today, in Strong auditorium.
His program will include the Sonata Opus 30, No. 1 in A Major by Beethoven, the Bach Sonata No. 6 in E Major for unaccompanied violin and the Concerto No. 3 in B Minor by Saint-Saens.
His wife, Lois Bradfield Palmer fine arts senior, will accompany him.
Kansas State Historical Society
--head injuries and cuts and bruises. A second person, Ann Perry of Kansas City, Mo., who was in the car with him, had several teeth broken, cuts on the face, and suffered severe shock. They were unconscious when taken to Lawrence Memorial hospital.
Topeka. Ks.
Daily Kansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday,Feb.25,1952
Student Hurt Seriously In Automobile Accident
Madison Murray, college sophomore, was one of three persons seriously injured in an automobile collision on Highway 24, eight miles east of Tonganoxie at midnight Saturday.
The car which the student was $ \textcircled{6} $
MADISON MURRAY
The car which the student was driving east collided head-on with another car coming west. The two smashed as the westbound car was attempting to pass a large transport truck. The truck was sideswiped.
Murray suffered a fractured thigh.
Gilbert Highet, Scotch classical scholar, author and education authority will be on the campus three days this week as guest lecturer in the Humanities series.
Guest Speaker's Schedule Set
C. H. BOWEN
Mr. Highet's schedule will be:
Todav
4:00 p.m. -- Address to the University faculty in Strong auditorium on North Park Boulevard.
Date: Change and the Teacher:
7:30 pm. Informal reception at the
Fitness club. Staff members are
invited to meet Mr. and Mrs.
Highet.
Tuesday
9 a.m.—Introduction to Philosophy class, 101 Strong.
6 p.m.-Humanities committee dinner at the Faculty club.
8 p.m.-Humanities Lecture, "The Migration of Ideas" at Fraser theater.
Wednesday
10 a.m.—Masterpieces of World Literature class, 206 Fraser.
Mr. Highet was educated at Glasgow and Oxford universities and has taught at Columbia university since 1937, except for five years of war service. He is now Anthon professor of Latin at Columbia.
His most recent books are "The Classical Tradition: Greek and Roman Influences on Western Literature" and "The Art of Teaching." Both have been reprinted and are now being translated into Spanish, Italian and Japanese.
Holman is president of the fraternity. The award was announced last week.
Ben Holman, journalism senior, will appear on the KFKU radio show, "Cavalcade of Hits," at 7 p.m. Tuesday to explain the recently announced brotherhood award to be sponsored by Kappa Alpha PSi fraternity.
Fraternity Head To Explain Brotherhood Award On Radio
--head injuries and cuts and bruises. A second person, Ann Perry of Kansas City, Mo., who was in the car with him, had several teeth broken, cuts on the face, and suffered severe shock. They were unconscious when taken to Lawrence Memorial hospital.
The driver of the westbound car, Bruin Grays of Kansas City, Mo., suffered cuts on the scalp and a possible broken ankle or foot. He was conscious when taken to Providence hospital in Kansas City, Kan.
The physician who treated Murray described his condition as critical. He had not recovered consciousness at 11 a.m. today and has shown little improvement since being admitted to the hospital.
Ann Perry regained consciousness this morning and her condition was described as slightly improved.
A nurse at Providence hospital said Gray's condition was fair. He was fully conscious.
Both cars were demolished. They were towed to Salmon's garage in Tonganoxie.
The cars collided in the south lane of the highway. Murray's car, a 1946 Oldsmobile was knocked into a position at a right angle with the road. Grays' car, a 1948 Chrysler, was tossed into the ditch along the road.
Murray is well known on the campus for his singing of popular hits. He is a member of the All Student Council and the KuKu pep organization. Ann Perry had been his guest in Lawrence. The two were returning to Kansas City.
Tryouts for parts in College Daze, student musical, will be from 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in the Military Science drill hall.
College Daze Sets Tryouts
Singers, dancers and actors are needed. Dana Hudkins, education junior and director, said no previous experience is necessary to tryout, and an attempt will be made to fit all who try out into the production
College Daze is an annual student musical sponsored by Student Union activities. The series was begun in 1948 with a one night performance. This year's show will last four evenings, April 29-30, and May 2-3.
The musical, a love story about college people, is for the entertainment of students. The purpose of the production is to give all who ever had a yen to act an opportunity to perform in a real production.
Dormitory Counselor Positions Available
The deadline for freshman dorm counselor applications is Monday, March 10. Miss Martha Peterson, an admired dean of women, has announced.
All applications should be returned to the dean of women's office. 220 Strong, by that time.
Women interested may obtain application forms from the dean of office offices.
WEATHER
Generally fair tonight and Tuesday, colder southeast and extreme east and not quite so cold northwest portion tonight, warmer Tuesday,
Page 2 University Daily Kansar
Monday, Feb. 25, 1952 Comments
Editorials
'Beloved Country' A Story With Significance
Early in 1948 "Cry the Beloved Country," a first novel by South African Alan Paton, slipped almost unheralded into bookshops in this country. Now after three years and numerous translations London films bring it to the screen.
Literary critics and the general reading public have received Mr. Paton's book as a masterpiece for its beautiful prose, deep spirituality and understanding of human sufferings.
Adaptation for the movies was done by Mr. Paton, but as Time magazine says, "Unhappily, the film betrays its literary emotion rather than motion."
The story is this: Rev. Stephen Kumalo (Canada Lee) a Zulu minister, leaves his native province, Natal, to journey to Johannesburg to persuade his lost sister and son to return to the wholesome life of the outlying provinces. In Johannesburg, the simple and sincere man faces all of the major facets of one of the most complex sociological problems in the world—the white exploitation of the South African native, and its results.
Erosion and starvation in the outlying provinces and the cruel living conditions in the cities foster high native crime and feed the blanket of fear which envelopes the population.
Zoltan Korda filmed the picture in the real locale: Ixopo, Carisbrooke and Johannesburg. These are expansive shots of rolling green hills, played-out mining areas and savage slums. Though the movie has the novel's passion, it has lost much of the poetry.
In the character of Stephen Kumalo, the author achieves his plea for tolerance, fairness and reconstruction for the beloved land of sun and gold.
The plea has been answered in South Africa with more fear and tyranny. The rate of native crime is higher than ever before and a larger portion of the population in disenfranchised fter the unconstitutional decree of Prime Minister Malan last summer.
In Johannesburg last week Mr. Paton announced that current world affairs had left him feeling "so uncertain and politically frustrated" that he and his wife are going into seclusion for a year.
"Sadness and fear and hate, how they well up in the mind and heart, whenever one opens the pages of these messengers of doom . . . Cry the beloved country, these things are not at an end. The sun pours down on the earth, on the lovely land that man cannot enjoy. He knows only the fear of his heart."
These are the key words to the South African problem, Mr. Paton says. With little revision they could apply to the rest of the troubled world. —Katrina Swartz.
short ones
Billy Graham, the fiery evangelist, declares there is much corruption in Washington. This is almost as earth-shaking as Senator Kefauver's statement that "a Democrat can win an election."
KEN COLLINS
“. . and here, freshman, Bruno is working on a chemical to make people invisible . . Oh Bruno? Where are you, Bruno?”
'Princeton Students Did It'
Comments .
At the University of Princeton police chased, but failed to catch, two students charged with tearing down nine rural type mail boxes and stealing one sign.
Said the police chief, "The only thing we know is that Princeton university students did it."
'Leave Us Alone Week'
The Idaho Argonaut, University of Idaho, has instituted a "Leave Us Alone Week" in honor of mid-semester exams. What the Argonaut wants is a little quiet.—“A week in which we can be free of private 'gimme' campaigns. . .salesmen. . . declarations. . . and queen contests. . .”
Texas Welches on Blood Promises... Only 265 of the 2,800 Texas university students who pledged blood showed up to donate in the first three days of the bloodmobile visit last week. The drive for pledges was given a two-page write-up in Life magazine, and the chairman expressed disappointment at the small turnout. Could it be the brave Texans are afraid of needles?
A student at Southwest Texas State Teachers college spent an entire week in the stall with a 1,139 pound steer, caring for him painstakingly. His steer won the Houston Fat Stock show award, and after collecting $18,600 from a Houston restaurant owner for the giant steer, he had no beef coming.
Nurses Steer for $110 an Hour
At Sacramento Junior College the president and vice president of the sophomore class were elected by a landslide. Total vote: 11.
Interpretive Articles
Crusading Billy Graham, a stylish groomed young minister, is rebuilding in the minds of American people something that has suffered a bit of de-emphasis in the past years.
Billy Graham Offers Solution
That de-emphasis has been a lack of religion and moral goodness. With his revivals in the National Guard armory in Washington, D.C., Graham has stirred up as much excitement in the past few weeks with his "moral dilemma" crusade as the administration has stirred up with the recent corruption scandals.
Judging from the crowds that have gathered to hear the evangelist, the people like his theories. Although no member of Congress or high-level bureaucrats have been among the converts that have walked down the repentance trail, many of them have sat on the speaker's platform to listen. Other big-shots have been seen in the audience.
While Graham draws the crowds his staff keeps the number of converts on file—all in a businesslike manner. Assistants check the activities of the converts to see if Graham's words are actually heeded.
The atomic bomb has been a subject of emotional appeal in his revivals.
"Why man, let the atom bomb come; we're ready for them if we're Christians. It is not Communism I fear most, but moral corruption inside America."
His opening crowd in the armory numbered 10,000. Since then the crowds have appeared in a steady number of five or six thousand. He has also drawn crowds with noon talks in the Pentagon.
His words seem to suit the senators enough for some to praise his work. But he has drawn criticism from rival preachers. The Rev. A. Powell Davies, pastor of the Washington's All Souls' Unitarian church, says he is using old-time religion which has caused guilt feelings in the listeners.
The Rev. Davies statement was counteracted by one from Dr. George Docherty, pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian church. Dr. Docherty said.
"I am certain that this young man is being used by God in the nation's capital to remind us of the sovereignty of God."
If our basic beliefs are shaken, Graham can maintain and renew our faith. We believe he has a good start. —Lou Fry.
Communists A Menace In British Malaya
Malaya is a British colony in Southeast Asia. And it's another of the Southeast Asian countries having Communist troubles.
Malaya, a peninsula just southwest of Burma, is about the size of New York state.
Its population is about 75 per cent Malayan and Chinese. The remainder, besides the British, is Indian, Ceylonese, and Eurasian. The Malayans are easy-going as far as government and development are concerned; the Chinese are the business men; the British are the governors, and the Indians, although few in comparison, are political minded.
Malaya has only one season, but has plenty of rain. It is four-fifths jungles, the present hang-out of the Communists. The Communists are Chinese who know the jungle, and routing them out is difficult for the British. The jungle is dense, travel is slow, and the rain makes the ground slippery and twice as hard to walk over. Behind every bush Communists may be lurking in ambush, only to be discovered too late.
The Communists aren't just living off the jungle. They force outlying villages to give them supplies. Whether these outlying groups are sympathetic doesn't matter. If they don't comply, they find themselves stretched out in a tree with their throats slit as a reminder to others. The Chinese in towns pay to keep their families in China in good health, others pay to keep their buses in transit from town to town, and others pay to keep their plantations going.
Under the Briggs plan, the British have moved more than 200,000 of these 400,000 outlying Chinese into camps that are protected by barbed-wire and patrols. By this move they hope to cut down Communist supply sources and they have succeeded to some extent.
The British also are waging a psychological war with the jungle bandits. They either drop leaflets by air, or patrols leave them at old camp sites. The leaflets compare the miserable life of those in the jungle to those who have surrendered and are enjoying life in the city.
The Communists in Mayala are not as developed as other Chinese Communists. They haven't established liberation areas, and they fight over women and money. Around their camp sites have been found pieces of paper with such things as "he's too sullen," indicating that they have a sort of bull session in their meetings.
Their main objective is to disrupt the country's economic system. Malaya's economy is tied up in its two major resources, tin and rubber. The tin mines are more easily defended from the Communists than are the rubber plantations.
The owners of the plantations are in constant danger. They drive around in armored cars, but that doesn't protect them from bombs that are tossed under their cars. At night the yard around the owners' house is lit by spots, and anyone step ping into the light gets shot. The easiest prey for these bandits is the rubber worker out on the plantation who isn't protected.
Malaya is a federation of nine states, each with a native ruler and two enclaves. Singapore is not included in the federation because it is a crown colony.
Malaya lacks leadership in trying to create a new nation. Dato Onn bin Pa'afar, minister for home affairs in the federation government, has started an Independence for Malaya party which is multi-racial. This attempt at unity could deal a blow to Communist activities if supported.
However, the Chinese are a discouraging factor in the movement. Their belief in duo-citizenship leads to the question, whose side would they take in case of invasion from China? The Chinese will have to consider this new movement, because if it succeeds they will be living under a nationalist management without any voice in the government. —Nancy F. Anderson.
Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
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Editor-in-Chief ... Jack Zimmerman
Editorial Assistants ... Anne Snyder, Joe Taylor
NEWS STAFF
Managing Editor Ellsworth Zohm
Assistant Managing Editors Helen Lou Fry, Ben Holman,
Joe Lastellic, Jim Powers
City Editor Jeanne Lambert
Assistant City Editors Jeanne Fitzgerald Phil Lyman,
Jerry Renner, Katrina Sworz
Telegraph Editor Charles Burch
Assistant Telegraph Editor Max Thompson
Society Editor Dianne Stonebraker
Assistant Society Editors Larena Barlow, Pauline Patterson
Sports Editor Jackie Jones
News Adviser Victor
BUSINESS STAFF
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Mail Subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, invigilated information periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910. Office under act of March 3, 1910.
1879, 1871, KAU, at Lawrence, Kan., Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Page 3
Monday, Feb. 25, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Clerks Discuss City Problems At Second Annual School
Problems of first, second and third class cities were emphasized in separate series of meetings at the second annual city clerks' school held at the University Thursday and Friday.
Dr. James W. Drury, assistant professor of political science, was coordinator.
Meetings for third class city clerks included study of municipal budget making, special operating problems, utility accounting, utility billing and relations between cities, townships and counties.
Clerks from first and second class cities discussed state aid to cities, what a manager expects from the clerk, capital improvement budgeting and municipal sewage pollution abatement.
Instructors were Mrs. Mildred LeSuer, Douglas county budget director; James H. Wiggsworth, city manager of Lawrence; Dwight Metzler, chief engineer of the state board of health, and Howard W. Hallman and Vernon Koch of the KU bureau of government research.
Prof. William Moreland, Fort Hays State college, discussed municipal government as seen by the citizen. Municipal transcripts were explained by William P. Timmerman, Topeka. Harold Horn, assistant city manager of El Dorado, explained procedures for municipal improvement.
The concluding session emphasized emergency warrants, municipal financial reporting and elections. Lecturers were Dr. Ethan P. Allen.
Howard Dunnington, college senior, Wednesday was elected vice president of Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity.
The fraternity will sponsor a concert by the University Little symphony, to be held Monday, March 4, in Strong auditorium. The orchestra will be directed by Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts.
Music Fraternity Elects Vice-President
Americans over 20 years of age use, on the average,143 match books a year, according to a match industry survey. Nine out of 10 of the match books are given away free.
professor of political science and director of KU government research; E. O. Stene, professor of political science; Dr. Drury, and Mr. Hallman.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 25, 1952
Kansas Tied For First As K-State Falls To Colorado
Colorado Upset Adds To Jayhawk Chances
The Kansas Jayhawkers moved into a tie for first place in the Big Seven conference race, as the Colorado Buffalooes upset a highly favored team of Kansas State Wildcats in Boulder Saturday night.
The victory, probably the greatest upset of the current basketball season, has added even more emphasis to the March 7 meeting between Kansas and Kansas State. The winner of this contest should be the undisputed champion of the Big Seven.
If KU defeats Missouri in their clash tonight, the Crimson and Blue quintet will again take over the conference lead with a record of eight victories against one loss. Kansas State now has seven wins against a single defeat.
The Buffs played a brilliant brand of basketball as they went all-out in a drive which gave them a 67 to 57 victory. The Wildeats led by five points in the second quarter, but the Colorado quintet overtook them before the half and were never stopped.
Top Squads Lose In Weekend Tilts
New York—(U.P.)—Holy Cross and St. John's of New York meet to provide an early line on the National Invitation Tournament tonight while Duquesne, Seton Hall, and Iowa State attempt to rebound from costly defeats in the standout games of the college basketball program.
Duquesne, Seton Hall and Iowa were among the six top-ranked teams which came a cropper on foreign courts Saturday night and will be seeking to bounce back with a vengeance.
Southern: West Virginia on top with 14-1, followed by North Carolina State with 11-2 and Duke 11-3.
Big Seven: Kansas State's loss to tie
up with Kansas, for league lead. "at"
Missouri Valley-St. Louis has clinched title with 8-0.
Southwest: Texas Christian has 9-1, followed by Texas with 7-3.
Dick Knostman, who has averaged over twenty points per game in conference play, was held to a single field goal and four free throws for the Wildcats.
In the other weekend game in the Big Seven, Iowa State defeated Oklahoma, dropping the Sooners into a tie with Missouri for the third and fourth places in the conference standings.
The standings of the Big Seven teams are:
(Conference games) W L
Kansas 7 1
Kansas State 7 1
Missouri 4 5
Oklahoma 4 5
Iowa State 3 5
Colorado 3 6
Nebraska 2 7
(All games) W L
Kansas 18 2
Kansas State 16 4
Missouri 12 9
Iowa State 9 8
OkLAmahoma 7 14
Colorado 6 13
Nebraska 5 15
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U.S. Makes Strong Showing In Sixth Winter Olympic
Oslo, Norway—(U.P.)—The sixth winter Olympic games, in which the United States made its strongest showing in history, closes today with two hockey games and brief but colorful ceremonies.
The only thing remaining to be placed in the competition was third place in the hockey competition. Sweden and Czechoslovakia, which tied for that spot with identical records of six wins and two defeats, were scheduled to meet in a playoff game at 10 a.m., CST. The other game matched also-rans Foland and
Germany.
Since the European championship was blended with the Olympic hockey tournament, the winner of the Swedish-Czech game will also win the European title. Canada won the hockey crown with seven victories and a tie, and the U.S. was second with six wins, one loss, and a tie.
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The showing in hockey was typical of the fine performance by U.S. athletes in the games here. The Star-Spangled athletes ran up a total of $89_{1/2}$ points to take second place in the unofficial team competition behind Norway's $125_{1/2}$.
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Mrs. Andrea Mead Lawrence, the 19-year-old dark-haired ski daredevil from Rutland, Vt., emerged the top U.S. star with two first places, in the ladies' giant slalom race and the regular slalom. But her brilliance was only slightly greater than that of Dick Button of Englewood, N.J., peerless master of the blades who successfully defended his figure-skating title, and dashing Ken Henry of Chicago, winner of the 500 meter speed skating race.
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2. Appear for physical examination at your nearest Air Base at Government expense.
I. Take transcript of college credits and copy of your nearest Air Force Base or Recruiting Station.
A man sits in a chair, leaning back with his legs crossed. He is sitting on a desk with a computer and various papers in front of him. A woman stands behind the desk, observing the man. She is wearing a hat and sunglasses.
3. Accomplish Flying Aptitude Tests and enlist for two years only!
4. The Selective Service Act awards you a four-month deferment while completing class assignment.
A
AIRCRAFTS
5. Immediate assignment to Aviation Cadet Training, July 19 and starting June 19 and October 2, 1962.
6. Attend Aviation
Cadet Training School
one year—either as
Pilot or observer.
Get $105 monthly plus
food, housing, uniforms,
and other benefits.
警察
7. Graduate and win your wingal Commissioned as a second lieutenant, you begin earning $5,000 a year. In addition, you receive $250 uniform allowance and a 30-day leave with pay.
WHERE To Get More Details
Visit your nearest U. S. Air Force Base or U. S. Army—U. S. Air Force Recruiting Station or write direct to Aviation Cadet, Headquarters, U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C.
The world is a bird's nest.
U.S. AIR FORCE
University Daily Kansan
d
Page 5
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Monday, Feb. 25, 1952
Track Squad Wins In Missouri Meet
The Kansas track squad won its third consecutive indoor dual meet of the season Saturday night as the Jayhawkers turned in an impressive 70-34 win over the Missouri Tigers at Columbia.
The Kansans swept 11 of the 12 first places in their first indoor victory over Missouri since 1944. On the basis of their performance against all opposition this season, the Jayhawkers should figure heavily in the Big Seven indoor meet in Kansas City this coming weekend.
As usual, Herb Semper continue his torrid pace in the two-mile setting a new record of 9:12.9. This broke his own record of 9:15.6 set last year.
In the mile, Wes Santee took first place, followed by Semper in second, and Harold Stephenson of Missouri. Santee ran the distance in 418.3.
The new dual meet record also broke the existing record for Brewer fieldhouse.
Bob DeVinney, high point winner for KU, took first place in both of the hurdles. He took the high hurdles in .07.7 and came back in the low event to win it in .07.0. Bill Reynolds of MU was second in the event, and Bill Bibberstein of Kansas was third.
Frank Cindrich and Don Hess of Kansas ran first and second in the 60-yard dash, with third going to Adams Fischer of MU. Cindrich was clocked at 106.4.
In the 440-yard dash, John Reider ered the distance in:51.7 to give Kansas another first place. Second and third went to Missouri.
In the two-mile event, Herb Semper ran well ahead of his nearest rival, Bob Fox of MU. Fox finished second, and third went to Norman Bitner of the Jayhawker squad.
Missouri took both second and third in the low hurdles. Their hurdlers were Harold Carter and George Baker.
Art Dalzell of Kansas ran first in the 880-yard run, followed by Clayton Hall of Missouri and Wes Santee of Kansas. Santee doubled in this event and the mile. Dalzell's time 1:56.5
The KU mile-relay team of Bob DeVinney Frank Cindrich, John Ribbins and Don Smith ran the event in 3:27.3 for their third indoor win of the season.
The pole vault again went to Jim Floyd of KU. Floyd vaulted 12 feet $10 \frac{3}{4}$ inches, which was four inches above that of Frank Dickey of MU.
This was considerably lower than the 13 feet which Floyd has cleared in other meets.
The high jump was the only event in which the Tigers were able to capture a first place. Bob Gordon took first with a leap of 6 feet 5 inches. Buzz Frazier and Bob Smith of Kansas tied for second and third
The broad jump went to Bob Smith of KU, and Buzz Frazier took third. The distance was 21 feet $ _{10} \frac{1}{4} $ inches.
Clyde Lovellette, giant center of the Kansas basketball squad, has again taken over the lead among the cage scorers in the national college ranks.
Larry Marsh tossed the shot 45 feet $ _{5/4} $ inches to give KU first in the shot-put. Merlin Gish also of Kansas took third with a heave of 44 feet $ _{8/4} $ inches.
Lovellette Tops Court Leaders In Cage Scoring
His nearest rival is Bobby Pettifl of LSU. The sophomore sensation trails Lovellette by 5 of a point with an average of 25.6. Chuck Darling of Iowa is third with a 25.5 average, and behind him in fourth place is Workman of West Virginia.
Lovellela has now scored a total of 521 points in 20 games to give him a 28.1 average. He has scored 206 goals and 109 free throws.
Second in the free throw percentage is Sears of Yale, who has $2.5 per cent. Tuttle of New Mexico is third with $2.1 per cent.
Bob Kenney of Kansas retains his lead among the nation's free throw artists, with 85.6 per cent accuracy. Kenney has scored 77 charity tosses out of 90 trips to the line.
In other statistics released by the National Collegiate Athletic bureau.
Jayhawks To Meet Tigers In Conference Clash Tonight
The Missouri Tigers move into Hooh auditorium tonight for a basketball game which could put Kansas in undisputed first place in the Big Seven conference race. Tipoff time is 7:35.
In their last meeting at Columbia, the Jayhawkers had to come from a one point deficit in the last thirty seconds of play to win the contest.
This will be Clyde Lovellette's last meeting against the Tigers and Coach Wilbur Stalcup has expressed his great pleasure over the fact. He said, "Lovellette's a fine boy, but we
PRECISE
WATCH REPAIRS
Win Wilfong and Art Helms of the Tigers will be unable to play due to scholastic ineligibility, which should be good news for the Kansas squad. Wilfong has been one of the most outstanding of the Missouri players, and he was instrumental in the near upset of Kansas at Columbia earlier in the season.
John Keller is scheduled to start in the place of Lienhard with the rest of the squad filling their usual positions. Lovelette will start at center, Bob Kenney will be the other forward, and Dean Kelley and Bill Hougland will finish out at the guard spot.
the kansas squad ranks high among the leaders in most departments.
The Kansas squad still is not in the best possible shape, as Bill Lienhard has not been placed back on the active list.
Lovelleth is twelfth in field goal percentages with 46.3 per cent on 179 accurate attempts out of 387 tries.
won't weep over Kansas' losing him."
Lovelle set a new conference scoring record against the Tigers during his sophomore year. At that time he scored 39 points, which has not been topped and has only been equaled by Dick Knostman of Kansas State.
Watch Repair
Electronically
Timed
Satisfaction
Guaranteed
WILBUR STALCUP
IRELAND
Wolfson's
743 Mass. Call 675
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
$$
BUDGET
Stretch your dollars and get the most out of your clothing by protecting it with regular cleaning.
INDEPENDENT
740 Vermont
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Phone 432
J. Paul Sheedy\* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test
I
POOR SHEEDY was in the soup with a turtle named Myrtle. "I'm in a tortizzy," he wailed, "what shell I do?" "Well, it's your messy hear that parts you from all the girls," his roommate said. "Better get Wildroot Cream-Oil!" Non-alcoholic. Contains soothing Lanolin. Relieves dryness. Removes loose, ugly dandruff. Helps you pass the Finger-Nail Test. Paul got Wildroot Cream-Oil and now he's outurtite-necking all the time! So don't stick your neck out...get some terrapin-money and hurry to the nearest drug or toilet goods counter for a bottle or tube of Wildroot Cream-Oil. And ask for it on your hare at your favorite barber shop. Then you'll really be in the swim.
- of 131 So. Harris Hill Rd., Williamsville, N.Y.
Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.
WILDRORT
CREAM OIL
MASK & BALM
UNIVERSITY BAR
BOOTSTORE
LANDISOL
LAMOIL
WILDROOT CREAM-OIL
Aloe Tonic
ATTENTION
STUDENTTHRIFTBOOKS
Holders of
It is unfortunate the Southern Pit Barbacue found they were unable to redeem their coupon which appears in your book.
But if you present your Thrift Book with their coupon at the Box office of the GRANADA THEATRE you will receive in its place TWO theatre coupons each good for one free admission when accompanied by one paid admission . Good at the GRANADA and the PATEE theatres.
We Hope This Meets With Your Approval To The Students Who Have Been Unable to Obtain a THRIFT BOOK
George T. Edmiston
Sale of the Thrift Books Will Begin as Soon as Weather Permits
Watch This Newspaper for the Special Announcements!!
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Feb. 25, 1952
'Down To Earth' Shoes Are Best
B. LORENA BARLOW
By LORENA BARLOW Nearly everyone shows good sense in choosing shoes for campus wear. Look around you in the classrooms —shoes are comfortable, yet attractive.
Unfortunately, dress shoes are not purchased with the same idea in mind. They have to be the latest style, look right with the dress they're bought to be worn with and fit the budget. These things are all right, too, but far too seldom is comfort demanded.
The first point of comfort is to be fitted with the correct size. And if your feet just happen to make you feel as though you should throw away the shoes and wear the boxes don't be tempted to buy a smaller size. Remember, nothing calls attention to feet more quickly than
shoes which cause their wearer to hobble around because her feet are being pinched.
Dress shoes needn't give the wearer that "skyscraper" look. Many shoes are being featured these days that do not have high heels. The medium height heels are not only attractive, but comfortable as well And there are good looking flat dress shoes for those of you going with men who aren't much taller than you.
When buying shoes remember these rules of good buying; make certain they are the correct size; try on both shoes and walk around the store in them; be honest with yourself if they don't feel good on your feet; break them in gradually at home, and above all, don't let vanity get the best of you.
Official Bulletin
Mathematical Colloquium, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, 203 Strong, Dr. Marc
Krasner.
KuKu pictures for Jayhawker will be taken 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Hoch Auditorium.
Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday 111 Strong.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7:15 p.m. Tuesday. 417 Snow. All members and oledges attend.
Tryouts for "College Daze" Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday 7 to 10 p.m. Military Science bldg.
El Atenoy se reunira el miercoles,
27 de felirero a las 7:30 in 113
Strong, musica, bailes, y conversation.
Big Seven Pep conclave meetings Saturday morning and Saturday afternoon March 1, Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, Mo. Pep clubs call Tom Foster, 569 immediately for tickets.
Openings for editor and business manager for K-Book, K-Calendar and Student Directory, written applications to be submitted to Bill Stinson, Dean of Men's office, deadline March 1. For details contact Bill Stinson.
The following are notified to appear before Student Court, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 26, Court Room, Green hall: Kenneth Lee Hoffman, M. Stul, Bob Rupp, William E. Kuster Jr., Roth Gatewood, Barbara Husted, Maude Elliott, Donald B. Pringle, Richard E. Burnett, Melville B. Evans, Andrew V. Davis, William H. Hingle, Irvin D. Brown, Mrs. Virginia Cook, Haroldean Young.
Valle Grande, high in the Jemez mountains of New Mexico, is the largest extinct volcano in the world.
Sterling-Oliver hall entertained February 23 with an informal party from 9 p.m. to midnight.
Sterling-Oliver Hall Lists Party Guests
The guests were Nancy Russell, Betty Landree, Louise Hoffman, Grace Bogart, Barbara Moser, Jerry Ann Street, Judy Brock, Carol McComb, Cloe Delaule, Marian Clyman and Donna Summers.
Mary Gayle Siebert, Ann Terfinger, Shirley Bell, Jessie Westgate, Nancy Farrish, Rupit Ruper, Helen Schneedeman, Wanda Sammons, Edith Nichols, Nora Wilson, Jeanette Bullis, Joan Fink, Dolores Edwards, Lucille Janousek and Marcia Hiniger.
The chaperones were Mrs. Kathleen Caughman, Mrs. D. L. Denham, Mrs. Carlotta Nellis and Mrs. R. H. Wilson, housemother.
Methodist Group Shows Film
Local scenes have been filmed in a Student Christian federation motion picture, "That All May Be One." The Rev. E. F. Price, Wesley foundation director, said that the film would be distributed throughout the world. The film had its first showing Sunday at the Methodist youth meeting.
Your
Plymouth
Man
. . . has a used car priced for you.
Buddy
GALLAGHER
634 Mass. Ph. 1000
100% COTTON
CALL 383
... for best results on dress or sport shirts.
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and Dry Cleaning
No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money.
Famous Singing Sisters Of 25 Years Ago Say They Are Still In Tune With The World
The Dolly sisters? One isn't around any more. Neither are the Cherry sisters.
"We laugh when some man of 82 comes up and says he heard us when he was a boy," chuckled Vivian as she tied a sequin-sprinkled scarf around the collar of her fur
Hollywood — (U.P.)— Two middle-aged blondes with cupid bow mouths are singing the tunes of the roaring 20's in a little night club these nights—just to prove they're alive.
At the Saddle and Sirloin restaurant in the San Francisco valley, they sing in white satin gowns while the cash customers shed nostalgic tears into their martins. The sisters still have fluffy blonde hair and blue eyes that twinkle.
But the Duncan sisters, the famous singing act of 25 years ago, want the world to know they're not obituaries or white-haired grandmothers.
coat. "Why, they call us the young oldtimers, that's it, the youngsters of the old-timers."
"Especially since Paramount is filming our life story," explained Vivian today. "Most of the time, when they make screen biographies, the originals aren't around."
The sisters figure their fans forget they were just teen-agers when they were stage headliners from 1917 on. Pioneers of the bathtub bin and racoon days remember their singing "Bye, Bye Blackbirds," Remembering, "Doodle De Doo" and songs from their famous Broadway hit, "Topsy and Eva."
"But New York, Chicago and Hollywood are the only real centers of show business," said Rosetta. "Every place else is the sticks. We had to come back here to get into things."
"We want to remind everyone that we're still here. When one of the Dolly sisters died, some people thought it was one of us. Same with the Cherry sisters. They always get us mixed up."
Paramount's movie, "Topsy and Iva," will have Betty Hutton playing Rosetta and Ginger Rogers as the younger Vivian. The sisters admit the studio is fictionizing their tale a bit, but "we think it's wonderful, anyway."
They live in Burlingame, south of San Francisco, where they run their "Duncan Sisters" School of the Theater" in an old house. They've sung in nightclubs in the Bay area recently.
It's No Fun To Be Left Out
Mrs. Lois Odoffer
Mr. Joe Brown
downs
travel service
1015, massachusetts st.
lawrence, kansas
Last call is going out for those who wanted a trip to Europe for this summer. Space is just about booked solid on all tours and travel plans. Today is the time to see Downs for your reservations.
Remember, no service charge or booking fees at Downs. Our experienced service costs you nothing more.
Don't say we didn't warn you if you are left out.
Phone 3661
Open Evenings
The Department of Speech and Drama
presents
a romantic comedy by Christopher Fry
THE LADY'S NOT FOR BURNING
Fraser Theatre
Wed., Thurs.; Fri., Sat.
Feb.27,28,29,March1
I-D CARDS ADMIT
Present I-D Cards for Reserve Seat at Ticket Office Green Hall Open Daily 9-12,1-4
我来当!
Page 7
Classified Advertising
Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in on Friday (or before except Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business office, Journey 43, Kansan Campus, 2:35 p.m. the day before publication.
Phone K.U.376
Classified Advertising Rates
Three Five
days days
75c $1.00
2c 3c
25 words or less ... 50c
Additional words ... 1c
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange tour and international travel whether tour on or off the airport. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
TRANSPORTATION
Ask us about family rates, ski coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Talent and Winter cruises. Book a show now for our summer summer. Call Miss Gleesner at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
ROOMS FOR BOYS, one single room,
and bath, 1414 Term. Phone 3060W. 27
1414 Term. Phone 3060W. 27
FOR RENT
FURNISHED APT. for rent at 1213 Ohio.
Second floor, next to bath; new kitchen and decorator in kitchen. Child aslcted. $50 per month, utilities paid.
Phone 2157M.
GRADUATE STUDENT wants young
nearest campus. Call 25158 evening.
25
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING; Experienced in reports term papers, theses, notes and stencil cutting. Prompt attention given. Phone 1952W. Mrs. Robert Lewis, 1915 Tenn. 28
TYPIST: References; prompt, accurate service and late model Royal typewriter. Convenient to KU Bring to 1724 Indiana or call Mrs. Blesner. 3011r T
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N. 75h. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island.
XPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Rocose, 833 Lau Apt. 4.提交 Ph. 2715J.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tt**
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1198 Mass.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment available for efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mals, home-made pies and conditioned parking space for customers. a-conditioned meal a.m. 8:45 to midnight. Crystal Café 609 vt.
JAYHAWKERS; Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff is trained to provide fur, fur, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tf
BUELE PLASTIC bilfoil containing identification, driver's license, and $16.00. If you owe the money, but return papers, Patty Edwards, 420 West 11th, 26 phone 860.
LOST
University Daily Kansan
WANTED
WANTED: Typing to do at home. Please
contact the office of 3. Lawrence,
Kansas, or phone 745126.
HELP WANTED
BOY TO BUS bushes 12:30 to 1:30 for
BUS and for extra parties. Phoos
KU 437.
MISCELLANEOUS
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
ers buyers. William J. Van
Almen, 3110R.
William Shakespeare was a german
writer. Walter E. Vest of Huntington, W. Ya.
Shakespeare Was Biologist
Bv UNITED PRESS
Dr. Vest, whose vocation is medicine and whose avocation is English literature, made his exposition at the International Gerontological Society's second congress on the problems of ailing.
He said the immortal bard understood full well both the physiological and pathological characteristics of senescene and he quoted abundantly from the master's works to prove his point.
The most nearly perfect of Shakespeare's biological descriptions he said, is the depicting of the "Seven Ages of Man" in "As You Like It."
In 28 lines the melancholy and philosophic character, Jaques, pictures the entire life span from cradle to grave. Dr. Vest said.
He quoted the sixth and seventh ages as "the most pertinent to ger- ontology."
The sixth age shifts
Into the lean and slipper'd pantaloon.
With spectacles on nose and pouch on side.
His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide.
For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice.
Turning again toward childish treble. nines
And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all.
That ends this strange eventful
history.
In his second childishness and mere oblivion.
Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.
Memphis — (U.P.) — Grady Cox,
television repairman, answered a call from a man who got a picture on his set but no sound. Cox found the customer looking at the picture while listening to the sound over the telephone from a neighbor's set.
Solves TV Problem Uniquely
Tulip trees of the Great Smoky mountains have been known to attain a height of 200 feet.
Announcing...
ICE CREAM - SUNDAES - MALTS - SHAKES
the reopening of the
QUARTS - PINTS
Drive-in
The week's schedule of programs to be heard on KFKU, university radio station, found at 1250 on the radio dial.
1835 Mass.
Dairy Queen
Radio Schedule
Jayhawk Junior classroom ... 2:00
and the Matel! The Merryman
and the Matel!
Broadway Rhapsody 2:45
Old friends in music from show
Mondav
Great Symphonies ... 7:00
Sibellus' sixth symphony.
Tuesday
Jayhawk Junior classroom ...2:30
Art by Radio: "Paper Batik" taught by Maud Ellsom, associate profes-
KU Cavalcade of Hits ... 7:00
top tunes of the week on Mt. Tread
Memo Pad ... 7:25
A collection of cultural events in the Kansas City, Lawrence, and Topeka area.
Wednesday
Jayhawk Junior classroom 2:30
Prairie footprints: "Missions to the
Solar System"
KU in the News 2:45
*Saturday morning, the University news of the week.*
Concert Hall 7:00
Featuring James Mellon and Jascha
Lehigh
Thursday
Jayhawk Junior classroom ...2:30
Adventures in Music Land:"Grand
Opera Gets a Face Lifting"—the life
and music of Wagner
Brainbusters 7:00
Brainbuster, professor of sociology
(master of ceremonies); Emil L. Telel,
associate professor of journalism;
W. H. Sheoamaker, professor of Romance
languages William A. Conoby.
instructor of English and L. C. Wood-
dean, dean of men.
Jayhawk Junior classroom ... 2:30
Storybook Train: "In the First Times," told by the Old Conductor storyteller, Robert Calderwood, as-
**Walter H. McLain Jr.**
Fridav
Museum of Art ... 2:45
Organ Receipt: Jerald Hamilton at the
Museum of Art
Texan Replaces Trees He Wasted
Chamber Music ... 7:00
Beethoven's Kreutzer sonata.
Palestine, Tex.—(U.P)—An Anderson County pioneer who can remember when pine trees six feet in diameter were common in this area plans to plant a forest of his own to make up for the loss of timber he helped to waste many years ago.
William Travis Todd, a 70-year-old farmer, already has set out 40,000 pine seedlings on his 2,000 acres of sandy soil, and he plans to start sowing seeds he gathered by hand.
The convert to reforestation said the days of trees more than a hundred feet high won't come back unless men restore what they have wasted. Before he dies, Todd said, he is determined to do his part.
He will keep only a small patch of land clear for farming, Todd said. All the rest he hopes to cover with pines.
Monday, Feb. 25, 1952
DEAN JERRY
MARTIN LEWIS
HAL WALLIS' PRESENTATION
SAILOR BEWARE
A Paramount Picture
Shows 2:30-7-9
Comfort Convenience
JAYHAWKER
NEW Park Place CUSHIONED CHAIRS
100
RUPEE
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
100
NOW thru TUES.
Open 6:45 p.m.
Gig Young
"HUNT THE MAN
DOWN"
-and-
Roy Rogers
"IN OLD AMARILLO"
Adlai Stevenson Would Fit As Presidential Nominee
Washington—(U.P.)—Gov. Adlai Ewing Stevenson of Illinois would just about fit the Democratic presidential nominee pattern if President Truman decided to retire. $ \textcircled{4} $
Governor Stevenson is in the last year of a four-year term. He is 52 and a veteran of World War I.
In general terms, Mr. Stevenson is all out for Mr. Truman's foreign policy, lags a bit behind him on some domestic questions. Mr. Stevenson is not a state's rights man, but he is suspicious of big central government responsibility and power to the states than would Mr. Truman.
Here are some positions Mr. Stevenson has taken on public questions:
Medical insurance: Does not endorse government-sponsored health insurance, but he says making good medical care available to all is one of the great pending social problems. Believes the solution lies in some compromise between private initiative and government initiative.
Foreign policy: "We want no more Munichs. As much as we hate war, we have drawn the sword in unprecedented defense of peace, security and democracy without justice is tyranny and that justice without force is impotent."
Civil rights; Twice failed to persuade the legislature to enact a fair employment practices bill. He holds that practice usually is better than a law.
Taxes and spending: As governor he increased welfare and education spending and sought to economize elsewhere. He increased gasoline and truck taxes. He vetoded numerous so-called pork-barrel bills and cut expenditures by the state veterans commission. In response
Engineers Go To School In A Massachusetts Cellar
Medford, Mass.—(U.P.)—A school for railroad engineers, possibly the only one of its kind in the world, in the cellar of a Medford home.
The schoolmaster is 72-year-old Charles H. Evans who learned his profession during 40 years with the Boston & Maine before retiring in 1945.
His one-room basement classroom is equipped with a library of 300 books and pamphlets, a complete line of railroad equipment supplied by manufacturers, and two blackboards.
UNION CAB
PHONE
2800 65
N-O-W!
FIXED
BAYONETS!
A 200 CENTURY FOX PICTURE
RICHARD
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Features: 3:03-7:20-9:25
Also: Color Cartoon-News
N-E-X-X-T!
TYRONE ANN
POWER·BLYTH
ILL NEVER
FORGET
YOU
TECH·NICOLOR
20
TYRONE ANN
POWER-BLYTH
ILL NEVER
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TECHNICOLOR
Granada
Soon . . 2 Really Big Ones! Clark Gable Broderick Crawford "LONE STAR"
"The Belle of New York"
to American Legion protests, Stevenson that the state Legion protested that veterans must not regard government aid as a "gravy train."
YOUR EYES
眼
Mr. Stevenson has not undertake a pre-convention campaign. He would not oppose Mr. Truman for the presidential nomination.
Wage-price controls: He is regarded as in general agreement with administration policy. However, he said in 1950 I don't like governorship fees. I don't like interference with free markets, free men free enterprise."
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
LAST TIMES TODAY
Please take our word and don't miss this truly wonderful picture . . Arthur Kennedy nominated for BEST ACTOR for his portrayal in . . .
"Bright Victory"
ARTHUR KENNEDY
PEGGY DOW
JOHN HUDSON
Evening Features at
7:22 - 9:21 p.m.
STARTS
TOMORROW
Matinee 2:00 p.m.
Show starts 2:30 p.m.
You'll Love
GIGI PERREAU
The most captivating young star since Shirley Temple and Margaret O'Brien!
"REUNION in RENO"
MARK STEVENS • Peggy DOW
Gigi PERREAU
P
PATEE
PHONE 321
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 25, 1952
1960
LEADING JOURNALISTS ATTEND DEDICATION—Numerous prominent newspapermen were among those who attended the Journalism building dedication. The above scene was taken at the Friday luncheon. Sitting at the speakers' table, left to right, are: Dolph Simons, toastmaster and publisher of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World; Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor; Dean Burton W. Marvin of the School of Journalism; Oscar Stauffer, publisher of the Topeka State Journal; Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, and Roy Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
3-Day Dedication Features Lectures, Lunches And Gifts
Lectures, luncheons, and presentation of gifts took place in the three-day dedication program of the remodeled building of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information
The program began with Erwin D. Canham's lecture, "News-papers and the Survival of a Free Society," at the all-student convoction at 9:20 a.m. Friday.
Five gifts were contributed by friends and former associates of William Allen White, late editor of the Emporia Gazette at the dedication services beginning at 11:00 a.m. Friday.
Dean Burton W. Marvin acknowledged the gifts before a group of visiting editors and other dignitaries in the new William Allen White Memorial Reading room.
Gifts included an oil portrait of Mr. White donated by Harry Scherman, president of the Book of the Month club. This painting done by Joseph Hirsch, will hang in the reading room above a row of glass toned cabinets.
Inside the cabinets are displayed a collection of first editions by William Allen White and a number of books about journalism. Some of the books have been inscribed by Mr. White. These were gifts from George Matthew Adams, a personal friend of the late editor and head of a New York newspaper syndicate.
The Albert T. Reid collection of famous cartoons was given to the school by Reid, a former cartoonist and once a Leavenworth and Toppea publisher. Some of the cartoons were drawn by Reid and others are the work of other well known artists.
An old Washington hand press, manufactured about 1827, was presented by Ferd Voiand, state printer, and is now on display in the building's typography lab.
W. L. White, son of the late editor and present owner of the Emporia Gazette, was the only donor to attend the dedication. He presented a group of mementos including the Pulitzer award scroll given to his father in 1923 for his editorial, "To An Anxious Friend."
Mr. White said that he plans to give additional mementos as soon as he has time to go through trunks and boxes packed away by his father at the home in Emporia.
Rolla Clymer, editor of the El Dorado Times and former employee of the Emporia Gazette, told listeners that the name William Allen White was born in American literature, at the luncheon showing the Friday morning services.
Henry J. Haskell, editor of the Kansas City Star, revealed to those at the luncheon some of the personal aspects of Mr. White. He recalled anecdotes and examples of wit displayed by Mr. White during the life-long friendship which existed between the two editors.
Mr. Canham was guest speaker at a banquet Friday evening spon-
French Visitor Says Paris Has No Comics
"There are no Sunday papers in Paris, and comic strips are absolutely unknown except for Monsieur Dagwood," according to Miss Marie Therese Barreau, press assistant from Paris, France.
"We have more newspapers than in an American city, but they are both in our schools." The sales sails on her 14 daily papers that average about 10 pages each.
All represent different political views and some are supported by political parties, she said.
Most of these papers carry smaller amounts of advertising than American papers. "One New York newspaper carried an advertisement for a single store that used up enough newsprint to print all 14 Paris papers for two days," Miss Barreau commented.
Miss Barreau said that differences between countris were mostly surface differences and that the people were much the same. During her stay in the United States she has lived with groups and families in Washington, D.C., Knoxville, Tennessee, New Orleans and on a dairy farm in Texas, as well as living in a woman's dormitory while at KU.
Miss Barreau is visiting the United States with four other foreign employees of the United States Information service, Albert H. Roche, press assistant in Brussels, Belgium; Per Amby, editor from Copenhagen, Denmark; Aino Niskanen, motion picture assistant from Helsinki, Finland, and A. Phillippe Vos, chief
of press publications in Bern Switzerland.
The group is part of 20 USIS employees touring the U. S. to learn about the American way of life.
YOUNG ELLIS
sored by Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi. The banquet followed the formal initiation of 16 men into Sigma Delta Chi.
Open house was held in the new building Sunday afternoon. Guests were guided on tours through the building by students and faculty members. Refreshments were served in the William Allen White Memorial Reading room.
MARIE BARREAU
More than 80 alumni were on the campus Saturday to attend a reunion and luncheon. Speakers at the luncheon were Dean Burton W. Marvin, Leon N. Flint, professor emeritus and former chairman of the journalism department, and Elmer F. B, professor of journalism.
Shenk Named Committee Head
Henry Shenk, chairman of the department of physical education, has been named chairman of the commencement activities committee, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced today.
Professor Shenk and the other committee members met Feb. 21 to discuss plans for the activities to take place Saturday, May 31 and Sunday and Monday, June 1 and 2. Construction on the Memorial Union building made the earlier meeting date necessary to arrange for substitute housing for the alumni activities.
Two students have been appointed to the committee. They are Darlene Greer and Donovan Hull, college seniors.
2 KU Men Will Help In Indian Program
Other members of the committee are Guy V. Keeler, director of the Extension lecture course; Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor; E. R. Ebel, professor of physical education; Miss Edna A. Hill, professor of home economics; Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design; Miss Wealthy Babcock, associate professor of mathematics; Claytor Crosier, assistant professor of civil engineering; Miss Marjorie Whitney, professor of design, and Leland J. Pritchard, professor of economics.
Dr. Kenneth E. Anderson, director of the bureau of educational research, and Dr. Gordon Collisier, director of the guidance bureau will leave for New Mexico and Arizona Tuesday to act as consultants for the Indian education evaluation program.
They are accompanying L. Madison Coombs, education specialist for the United States Indian service.
The purpose of the trip is to instruct education personnel as to the proper use and interpretation of test data gathered in an achievement testing program last fall. This testing program involved over 8,000 Indian and white children in all grades in New Mexico, Arizona and Colorado schools.
237
Mr. H. F. S. Smith, the Chairman of the Council of Governments of Scotland, and Mr. R. J. Macdonald, the Secretary of State for Education, are in conversation with a member of the Scottish Parliament. The painting above them depicts a man reading a document.
J-SCHOOL GETS PORTRAIT—W. L. White, son of William Allen White, shown chatting with Dean Burton W. Marvin in front of portrait of the famous Emporia editor. The painting was donated to the School of Journalism by Harry Scherman, president of the Book-of-the-Month club, and friend of Mr. White—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
LOCKING OVER THE EXHIBITS—William J. Dill and wife, the former Barbara McBeth of Lawrence, were among the alumni that visited the new Journalism building during the three-day dedication program. Mr. Dill is the son of the late Prof. William A. Dill, a member of the journalism staff from 1917 to 1939. The Dills are shown looking over one of the exhibits—Kansan photo by Jim Murray.
Most important problem scheduled for solution is the raising of funds to build West Europe airfields and communications. The U.S. has offered to put up 38 per cent of the $500,000,000 total cost, but the other NATO members are reluctant to pay the balance.
Snow, Rain Curtail Korean Activities
News Roundup
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea —(U.P.)—Snow and rain curtailed both air and ground activity along the 143-mile Korean war front today.
North Atlantic Council Picks Paris For Headquarters
Doubt over Pearson's availability for the job of running the streamlined organization created a mag which may delay the ending of the NATO session tonight. If Pearson fails to get approval from Ottawa to take the job, as some quarters feared, British Ambassador to Washington Sir Oliver Franks is expected to be the next candidate.
Lisbon, Portugal—(U.P.)—The North Atlantic Treaty council today picked Paris for its permanent headquarters and asked Canadian External Affairs Minister Lester B. Pearson to be its first secretary general.
U. S., South African and South Korean planes nevertheless flew through dense clouds to pound Communist troop and supply centers.
The South Africans alone claimed direct hits on 80 enemy troop shelters and 15 vehicle revoltments while U.S. Mustang fighters wrecked 19 troop shelters and 12 supply buildings.
Investigation Starts Amid Red Threats
Detroit— (U.P.) —The House un- American activities committee came here today amid threats to its in- formation into alleged Communist infiltration of Michigan's $3 billion defense industries that will be hampered by courtroom demands.
Rep. Charles E. Potter, only Michigan member of the Washington group, said he heard reports several of the 40 persons subpoenaed to testify at the week-long series of hearings planned to jam the hearing chamber and cause disturbances.
Hannah State Historical Society
Topeka, Ks.
SCHOOL CLUB
AWS CANDIDATES NAMED—Candidates in the Associated Women Students election Wednesday are: front row, left to right, Sandra Puliver, secretary; Marilyn Hawkinson, Greek ASC representative; Mary Betz, independent ASC representative; Jerry Hesse, president; Orinne Gray, president, and Nancy Canyan, treasurer. Back row, left to right, Donna Arnold, Greek ASC representative; Norma Lou Falletta, treasurer; Joan Lambert, independent ASC representative; Sydney States, treasurer; Anna Jean Hollyfield, vice-president; Diana Foltz, vice-president; Althea Rexroad, secretary; Victoria Rosenwald, independent ASC representative; Winifred Meyer, secretary, and Carol Oliver, Greek ASC representative—Kansan photo by
Candidates for office in the Associated Women Students pass through a rigorous elimination program designed to permit nomination of the most qualified women available for office.
Election of AWS officers and senate members for 1952-53 will be held on Wednesday. All women students may vote on presentation of their ID cards at the polls in Fraser hall and Strong rotunda. Polls will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
AWSNomineesNamed By Elimination Exams
Of the 39 women who filed petitions in the present elections, only 16 had their names put on the final slate.
The workshop consists of three different lectures by qualified speakers on different phases of leadership.
Miss Carmine Wolf, Topeca civic leader; Mrs. Harold Harvey, instructor of speech and drama at Lawrence Memorial High school and former campus leader, and Harry Adamson, director of religious education in Hutchinson, spoke at the 1952 workshop earlier this month.
Interested women file petitions for office during the workshop. Each petition on the petition her qualifications and on a statement why she wants to hold an AWS office.
Following the workshop all petitioners are given a written examination over the AWS constitution, a study guide issued to the petitioners, rules and regulations and material presented by workshop speakers.
The examination this year also contained problems in human relations. In addition, each woman was asked to outline and create a new project for AWS.
Women passing this test were invited to a special coffee to meet the elections committee and each other. After a coffee the elections committee hears by a coffee the presidential candidate of the previous year, meets to name the women whose names will appear on the ballots.
Members of this year's election committee are Loretta Cooley, college junior, chairman; Emalene Gooch, Beverly Jennings and Helene Steinbuchel, college seniors; Arden Angst and Donna McCosh, education seniors, and Virginia Thomson, business senior.
Besides passing through the elimination quiz and coffee, each candidate must meet the University requirements for participation in activities and special AWS requirements for specific offices.
The president must be a junior or a senior during her term of office and have already served at least one semester on the AWS senate. Similarly the vice-president must be a junior or a senior and have served at least one semester on the AWS senate. This likely insure that these two officers are familiar with the organization over which they will preside—the president, the senate; and the vice-president, the house.
To insure sophomore representation in the senate the office of secretary is open only to women in that class. Two representatives from the freshman class are elected in the fall.
The treasurer and All Student Council representatives may be sophomores, juniors or seniors. However, one ASC representative must be an independent, and the other affiliated with a social sorority.
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will speak at the annual Brotherhood dinner today at 6:30 p.m. at the First Congregational church parish house. The dinner is sponsored by the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy. It is a group composed of townspeople, students and faculty.
Murphy To Speak At Dinner
Tentative plans for commencement activities have been made by the commencement activities committee and approved by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy.
Committee members met Feb. 21 to discuss plans for the activities to take place Saturday, May 31, and Sunday and Monday, June 1 and 2. Construction on the Union building made the early meeting necessary
Plans have been made to transfer some alumni activities from the Union to other buildings.
Commencement Plans Released
3 p.m., Registration of alumni at the Union building.
The schedule is:
Saturday May 31
6:30 p.m., Alumni supper
Sunday, June 1
2 p.m., Class reunions, under the direction of Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the alumni association.
5 p.m., Commencement supper in Robinson gym.
7:30 p.m. Baccalaureate sermon.
Monday, June 2
8:30 a.m., Breakfast for class of 1952.
3 p.m., University reception in the Union lounge with Prof. and Mrs. Leland Pritchard as hosts.
Tryouts for parts in College Daze, student musical production, will begin at 7 p.m. today in the Military Science drill hall.
7 p.m., Commencement exercises.
Tryouts Tonight For Musical Show
Dana Hudkins, education junior and director, said singers, dancers and actors are needed for the cast. She stressed that no experience is needed to tryout. Singers should bring their own music and accompanist if possible.
The musical will be presented April 29 and 30, and May 2 and 3.
Daily Kansan
49th Year, No. 97
LAWRENCE, KANSAS Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952
Students To Plan Stadium Seating
Persons wishing to become members can do so early through purchasing membership from members wishing to sell. The price has ranged from $1,000 to $4,000 in recent years, but at a time was as high as $5,000.
Students will regulate the size of their own seating section at football games next fall. Almost 6,000 seats extending from the north 35-yard line to the south goal line have been transferred to student control.
Miss Haggans will also discuss hedging, a way of dealing in two markets at the same time to make up for losses in one through gains in another. Consistent hedging is possible only in a speculative futures market.
Bill Wilson, chairman of the student football seating committee, said that "taking action on the big problems has only created more smaller ones; these are student seating arrangements and the transfer of ID cards.
A terminal market, such as the Chicago board of trade, is a public marketplace where buyers and sellers go to trade. As only the 1,422 companies in the US do business there, members act as representatives for non-members.
James K. Hitt, registrar, "saw some real possibilities in the plan and has been one of its top backers," Wilson said.
Arthur Lonborg, director of athletics, on the other hand, revealed
Board Of Trade To Be Discussed
An inside view of operations in a commodity exchange will be presented by Miss Alice E. Haggans, education director of the Chicago board of trade, at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Strong auditorium.
After her lecture which will be preceded by a movie, Miss Haggans will answer questions about the Chicago board of trade.
Miss Haggans will discuss how grain is marketed in a cash market, buying and selling of actual grain, and the futures market.
Miss Haggans' visit to the University has been arranged by the department of marketing in the School of Business.
in early meetings that he doubted the possibilities of the new plan, but saw merit in making it possible for more high school students to attend games.
Meetings with L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy have convinced the committee that these men would favor a new plan if it were suitable.
The student section was transferred to control of the All Student council at a student-faculty meeting attended by Dr. Woodruff, Mr. Lonborg, Raymond Nichols, executive chair of chichet, Falkenstien, business manager of athletics. The Council gave its endorsement Thursday night.
Wilson said there should be plenty of seats available, probably about 300 more than can be filled by ID cards. "These could be distributed on a tax-only basis, or on a proportional-charge basis for parents," he said.
Journalist To Talk On U.S., Far East
The United States and the Far East will be discussed at the "Off the Record" session for journalism students when Albert Ravenholt, an associate of the Institute of Current World Affairs, will lead an informal discussion at 7 p.m. Wednesday.
The discussion period will be co-sponsored by Theta Sigma Phi and Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternities. All journalism students, faculty members, and anyone interested is invited.
Mr. Ravenholt has worked in Hong Kong, Formosa, and the Philippines and has done advanced work at Harvard university on Far Eastern affairs. He has been a correspondent for the Chicago Daily News Foreign Service since 1948.
The discussion will be held in the Atrium, 222 Strong. Coffee will be served.
Student Remains Unconscious
Student Remarks Unconscious Madison Murray, college sophomore, who was injured in an automobile collision Saturday night was still unconscious at Lawrence Memorial hospital early this morning.
No Problems Like Show Problems
WEATHER
Fair and warmer tonight and Wednesday, lows tonight 28-32, high Wednesday in 50's.
There is no business like show business and no problems like show problems.
By BOB NOLD
the costumes are expected Friday.
The first rehearsal was last Friday night. Another complete run-through was held Sunday.
Every production, amateur or professional, has its trials and tribulations, its happy moments and moments of despair prior to opening night.
The play is costumed in 15th century English style and as a result two problems occurred immediately. One was finding the exact shade of green for Mary Jukes' main dress in her role of Jennet.
The University of Kansas group presenting "The Lady's Not For Burning" Feb. 27 through March 1 is no exception.
He said the big difficulty for the actors has been Christopher Fry's beautiful handling of the English language. "It's easy to get caught up in Fry's words and miss the meaning," he said.
The other was the fact that women in this period wore their hair long and the women playing the vogued wearing the vogged short peddle, haircuts.
The costumes have been ordered from Eaves in New York, but because of the uncertainty of the exact appearance of these costumes, a search was made here to find the moss green dress desired.
The material was dyed in a kelly green and brown mixture for about two and a half hours Saturday. However, the mix dried, the material fell to very low temperature was then dyed in jade green and finally the right color was obtained.
This proved a hopeless task. Only two shades of green material could be found. One was a dark forest green and the other was chartreuse.
"We concentrated on the weak spots this week." Mr. Rea said.
Tom Rea, instructor of speech and director of the play, decided to buy the chartreuse and dye it.
The problem of long hair was solved for Molly Krival, wife of Arthur S. Krival, assistant professor of English, and Dee Price, fine arts freshman. They will wear head-dresses in their respective roles of Margaret Devise and Alizon. But Jennet's hair is another matter, since
she doesn't wear a headdress.
Mr. Rea wanted Jennet to have an aurtnight in her hair. Mrs. Jukes natural hair color is light brown, and she doesn't want to dye her hair since she is leaving for New York so soon after the play.
Mr. Rea rented a wig for her, but isn't satisfied with it. As an alternative, he found a hair dresser who has a false piece of hair that matches Mrs. Jukes' natural hair. "One way or the other," he said, "I have to get more hair on Lou. She can't grow it fast enough."
Other misfortunes suffered by the group are the illness of Allen Crafton, professor of speech, who has a role in the play, and the fact that the night before the play opens, a Humanities lecture is being held in Fraser theater, where the group is practicing.
On the brighter side, the set is up and the painting has started, and
(
STUDENTS REHEARSE PLAY—Practicing a scene from the second act of "The Lady's Not For Burning," the University's third major play, are Mary Lou Jukes, graduate student; Lynn Osborn, college senior, and Bob Allen, KLWN announcer, left to right.
2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952 Letters
Editorials
Arise, Kansans! Rebel Against Business Suits
Arise, Kansans of the world! Rebel against the forces of conformity! Strike down those who regulate your lives!
Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of themselves and stop wearing such ridiculous clothing. Now—while still in the cradle of thought—is the time to set the wheels in motion. Vow that comfort shall be the criterion in all forms of dress. Bring an end to the confining business suit and neck-choking tie!
Let us consider the working attire of the average white-collar man. It's a conspiracy between tailors, cloth-makers, designers and others. It's simply a matter of their sole concern being piling more and more material on the male chassis with no regard for comfort or usability.
First comes the matter of a white shirt. Anyone who has ever worn one knows that it won't stay white long. A little sweat or a careless pencil swipe can make it look dirty before 10 a.m.
Almost to a man the collar fits either so tightly that the wearer feels like a cattle rustler receiving justice or so loosely that he looks like Whirlaway wearing a horseshoe of roses. Seldom does a white-collar man both look and feel right.
The coat of a business suit is enough to make a sensible person wonder what men think with. It's straight back, pulled-in waist and flat pockets (which can't carry anything more than a hankie or book of matches) must have been designed for show window dummies. Why a man practically rips out the lining every time he reaches across his desk for a pencil.
Then consider that horror of horrors, the tie. What does it do —except hide the top button? Some attempt to justify its use by saying it is a man's only opportunity to use color. But what do men usually pick for "color." Dark blue checks, maroon polka-dots or deep green stripes. Ridiculous!
A handful of courageous professors have begun to beat a path toward sensibility. In a few departments there are the Daniel Boones of broadcloth. They have recognized they can teach as well if not better in open-necked sports shirts.
Some have gone so far as to pioneer with the loosely fitted sports jacket and the high-necked sweat shirt at faculty meetings and Saturday morning seminars.
The charge to take up the torch and carry it on is for the students. When comes June and a new class of graduates leave Mount Oread, let it take the lead in giving new freedom to their fellow men.
It's time for Kansans to raise more sport clothes and fewer business suits! —Joe Taylor.
short ones
Fluorine is being placed in the water system of Washington, D.C. to help stop tooth decay. Do you suppose there also is something which could be used to help stop moral decay?
Some Republicans are sure that come their national convention in June they can prove that a veteran can be drafted.
A typographical error lists one of Eisenhower's supporters as Senator Horse of Oregon. Perhaps this is an omen of the mouth from which the straight info will come.
The lack of common knowledge which some technical workers show is amazing. A Paris stylist in commenting on forthcoming fashions says, "Chests will be higher, but I can't say yet where waists will be."
Last night I watched four intelligent, well-trained young men, the best that two democratic nations had to offer, sit on a platform staring down at a large silent auditorium. Only here and there were the seats occupied.
Deplores Small Crowd At Debate
Dear Editor:
The event was an international debate—nothing too important I guess. And the audience, of course, was small for there was a basketball game on the Hill.
The small group there, however,
seemed to enjoy the crisp witty
parlance, flavored with English
brogue. It listened and laughed as
the debaters struggled to escape the
intellectual snares set for them by
their opponents.
The question is when will we, as responsible citizens, become concerned with the intellectual sares set for us? When will our interests in government and socio-political ideologies equal that of sports, movies, and other trivia? When will we realize that the leadership of this country rests upon the shoulders of those who are willing to take the time to study and debate current problems and philosophies.
Anyone who heard Prof. E. C. Buehler's curt analysis of our decline of interest in our American heritage, the right to debate, and his expressed faith in its intrinsic worth cannot help but realize how important the exercising of our privilege is.
Rozanne Atkins college sophomore
John Reid, law student at Melbourne university, expressed his thanks for the opportunity of exchanging ideas with us, regardless of the small audience, for he said "that is what is important."
Is it not?
Interpretive Articles
At Drake University two students have resigned from an honorary music sorority after learning that the group has an "unwritten law" forbidding Negroes to join.
Comments . . .
The sorority, Mu Phi Epsilon, is said to share this policy with three other national music sororities.
The Drake Times Delphic, in a poll based on the story, found that "only five of 35" professional and honorary Greek groups on campus discriminate.
Are Presidential Primaries Accurate?
With the spectacular flop of the various polls in the 1948 elections the nation's faith was shaken in this method of forecasting.
The different dates these elections are held—from March 11 to June 3—also may be a distorting factor in accurately predicting the outcome of the election. Public opinion has shifted widely even before the presidential primaries have begun. It may lead us to wonder when the results of previous primaries come in how much the later primaries will be affected.
Whether the system of presidential preference primaries is more exact than the poll system is a matter for debate.
Only 16 states—one-third of the total—have any form of presidential primary. The states—New Hampshire, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Illinois, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts, Maryland, Ohio, Florida, West Virginia, Oregon, California and South Dakota—cannot be considered completely accurate examples of a cross section of U.S. voters.
The states of the deep South are not presentnor are those of the northwest. The New England states are heavily represented.
Candidates, also, seem to try to thwart the original purpose of the preferential primaries by entering the states they are fairly sure of carrying. Senator Taft of Ohio was quick to enter his name in the Ohio primaries. Mr. Stassen of Minnesota was equally as rapid in getting on the Minnesota ballot.
Senator Taft will compete in the Wisconsin, Illinois and Ohio trials and Mr. Stassen is trying his luck in Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nebraska and Minnesota. General MacArthur's name is entered in the Illinois primaries.
To date, the big discussions have centered on the New Hampshire primaries, the first in the series. General Eisenhower, Sen. Estes Kefauver and Mr. Truman will be judged in this meeting.
Democrat Hubert Humphrey is trying his luck in his home state of Minnesota while Senator Kefauver and Brien McMahon have entered the Illinois primary.
Since these primaries are only "advisory" and not binding on convention delegates, let them have their fun. Ron Kull.
PLATO
GEOMETRY
KEN
COLLIN'S
"Boy! Has the librarian got a false impression of me!"
Interpretive Articles
Japan's New Defense Plan Arouses Strong Criticisms
Japan's prime minister Shigeru Yoshida recently submitted to John Foster Dulles, State department adviser and framer of the Japanese peace treaty, a blueprint of a "plan for Japan's new defense forces."
It envisages the expansion of the present police reserve force of 75,000 to 120,000 and the equipping of the maritime safety force with 20 vessels of 2,000 ton class by March, 1953.
The premier's plan has aroused vociferous criticism both in and outside the Diet. The opposition has denounced the plan as contradictory to Japan's postwar constitution stipulating her permanent renunciation of war. They add it will pave the way for the resuscitation of militarism.
These objectors, excepting the Communists who are eager to see Japan's "liberation from America's imperialistic exploitation," look to the collective security by the United Nations for defense of Japan from possible outside invasion. However, they have failed to answer. Yoshida's question:
Is it fair and reasonable for "independent" Japan to depend solely on external forces without bearing her share in the defense of her own land?
There is no denying that the "new defense force plan" spells a de facto rearming. The fanatic idolatry of the Japanese emperor among part of the nation and the recent mass return of the once-ousted wartime magnates to leading positions—political and financial—provide ample ground for the fear of possible resurgence of prewar influences.
Yoshida's plan has answered, at least partly, his own question to his opponents. At the same time, however, it has stirred up into a flame a long-smoldering problem:
What should be done to prevent Japan from retracing her steps toward the "Great Empire of Japan" in ante bellum days? Nobody in Japan seems to know the solution. —Yujiro Maeda.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room
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tice, Honors, Ken, every afternoon during the University year except
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Page 3
Journalism Alumni Recall 'Good Old Days'
University Daily Kansan
By MARILYN DURACH
"Almost too fancy to work in" was the opinion of many journalism alumni when they returned Saturday to find the new spacious and modern building so different from the "Old Shack."
The alumni, many of whom have become editors of various publications throughout the country, were amazed at the progress of the School of Journalism.
However, they seemed to enjoy even more recalling the unusual incidents and problems of their own days of working on the Kansan.
He said jokingly that the lack of faculty supervision was what hurried up the progress of the School of Journalism .
The first editor of the Daily Kansan, Louis LacCross, editorial editor of the St. Louis Globe Democrat, ran the paper in the basement of Fraser without faculty supervision in 1911.
Mr. LaCoss did not take any journalism courses but majored in English, "in the days of Jimmy Green and when 'Daddy' Flint was just a young sprout."
As Kansan editor, Mr. LaCoss recalls writing "a flaming editorial
about Governor Stubbs" which caused him to believe that the chancellor of the University was using the Kansan to fight his campaign for senator.
Arch M. O'Bryant, city editor of the Wichita Eagle, said when he was in school men wanted to prove they were tough. They may want to do the same thing now but never to the extent of running around the block bare-footed in snow a foot deep, as he said he did.
Mr. Whitney met his wife in school and they were both given D's in one class because they sat on the back row and talked all the time, despite the efforts of the instructor to separate them.
"The trained seals" was the name given to the class of 1912 by Merle Thorpe, chairman of the journalism department. "We jumped through hoops when Mr. Thorpe spoke". Mr. Charles Sweet, advertising manager
David Whitney, associate editor of the World Book and Encyclopedia in Chicago, held every position offered on the Kansan. While editor-in-chief Mr. Whitney was also a leader of a political party and was often accused of having a biased paper.
of Capper publications in Topeka and a member of the class, said.
Mr. Sweet remembers his review of a play which caused the writer and director, an English instructor, to wave a sword in anger at the editor of the Kansan.
His wife, Mrs. Mildred Sweet, was the first woman to get a master's degree in journalism. She did so in 1916. She remembers that once the administration "stopped the press" because of one of her editorials.
Mr. Hadley found himself in a difficult situation when this case came before the student supreme court, of which he was a judge. He said the group became quite wild and used both tear gas and water bombs. "This was my only venture into communism," he said.
Hugh Hadley, who has been with the Kansas City Times for eight years, was a member of the "Veterans of Future Wars," a riotous group of students who stationed themselves at "Dear Post Number One" near Potter lake in 1936.
The killer "whale" isn't really a whale but the largest member of the porpoise family.
Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952
All On One Day
Clinton, Ill. III—(U.P.)—Expenses for birthday cakes are held to a minimum in the Raymond Arnold household. All three Arnold children were born on the same date, Nov. 27. The eldest is four years old, the second two, and the baby was born Nov. 27, 1951.
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952
Kansas Defeats Missouri In Conference Game, 65-54
By JACKIE JONES Daily Kansan Sports Editor
The Kansas Jayhawkers moved into undisputed first place in the Big Seven conference basketball race Monday night as they defeated a stubborn Missouri team, 65 to 54.
The game was one of the fastest and most rugged affairs staged in Hoch auditorium this season, but it never got out of hand even though tempers flared on several occasions.
Missouri took the first lead on a long shot by Don Dippold, but Kansas went ahead after five minutes of play on two quick shots by Bob
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The score was tied three times in the first quarter, but Kansas led at the end of the period, 22 to 21, after Bill Houglund scored on a long set shot.
At the half Kansas led by five points, 36 to 31, at the end of the third quarter it was 47 to 40, and at the final whistle the Jayhawkers held an eleven point margin.
The largest lead that the Kansas quintet was able to make, was twelve points, 65 to 53 with a minute and a half left to play.
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In the opening minutes of the third quarter, Hoag tipped in a shot to make the count 38 to 31, and Keller hit on a free throw to make it 39 to 31.
Missouri came back twice in the third stanza to cut the 'Yahawkers'
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lead to five points, but in the closing minutes of the quarter the Kansas squad played control ball and held off a would-be Missouri rally.
Missouri (54) G FT F
Cruts 0 0 1
Dippold 3 2 5
Landolt 2 1 3
Oligschlaeger 0 0 3
Reiter 5 4 3
Stauffer 8 4 4
Adams 0 0 3
Casteel 0 2 2
Hughes 0 1 1
Murrey 0 0 0
Park 1 2 2
Hougland opened the final quarter with a set shot from beyond the free throw line to make the count 49 to 40. Half way through the quarter, Kansas held a 58 to 49 lead, but Bill Stauffer, Missouri's top center, stole the ball and scored to cut the lead to 7 points.
Totals ... 19 16 27
Kansas (65) G FT F
Davenport 0 0 2
Keller 1 4 3
Kenney 4 2 4
Lienhard 0 0 1
Squires 0 0 0
Born 0 0 0
Lovellette 12 5 5
Heitholt 0 0 1
Hoag 1 0 5
Hougland 6 3 5
Johnson 0 0 0
D. Kelley 1 1 2
Totals ... 25 15 28
Missouri began to press in the closing minutes of the quarter as Kansas held the ball. The Missourians were able to score only one point in the final five minutes. Ron Hughes hit a free throw.
Missouri 21 10 9 14-54
Kansas 22 14 11 18-64
Free throws missed: Missouri-
Landolt 2, Stauffer, Castel, Murrey,
Park 2, Kansas - Kenney 2, Lovelette,
Heitbolt 2, Houglue 2, Kelley.
The victory gave the Jayhawkers a three-game sweep over the Tigers this season and six wins out of the 15 games with the Missouri cage crew.
Clyde Lovelle, the Jayhawker All-American center, continued his torrid scoring pace with a 29 point burst. This gave him a total of 550 points this season, enough to set a new season's scoring record for Kansas.
(Missouri was charged with one technical foul).
Lovelliele broke his own record of 548 points set last season, and he still has three games to go during the current season.
Training Camps Prepare For '52
Phoenix, Ariz. — (U.P.)—The New York Giants, masters of the close shave, today prepared to greet their last missing regular—Sal (the barber) Maglie.
Maglie, a 23-game winner in 1951 signed last week for a reported $35,000.
St. Petersburg, Fla., (U.P.)-Ed Lopat, the left hander who won 21 games for the world champions last season, has the best form of any pitcher in the Yankee camp so far.
Vero Beach, Fla. — (U,P)—First baseman Gil Hodges who has been studying how to bunt and hit to right field, featured the Dodgers' batting practice yesterday with a number of 400-foot drives—to left field.
Manager Charley Dressen says the home run hitter will be more valuable if he learns to bunt and pull his hits to right field.
Sport De-emphasis Cited As Reason In Hockey-Lacrosse Popularity Rise
St. Petersburg, Fla. —(U,P)—It's hardly news but Stan Musial, five-time National league batting champion, appeared to be in mid-season form yesterday as he repeatedly lashed the ball over the right field wall during the Cardinal batting drill.
Troy, N. Y. —(U.P)—De-emphasis of major sports in colleges and universities throughout the nation is in direct contrast to the policies of Ned Harkness of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Harkness, youngest member of a family of coaches, tutors hockey and lacrosse at the Hudson river engineering school. And it doesn't take a slide rule to figure out that his teams have built up outstanding records in collegiate competition.
Evidence of his prowess was shown in a hockey game last week at Lawrence. The contest attracted the team, and in the history of area indoor sports.
"Hockey definitely is on its way up with schools putting in artificial rinks," he said. "That's why the Canadians have dominated the sport.
He attributes popularity gains in the two sports to the de-emphasis of football and other collegiate athletics.
"As for lacrosse popularity, it's growing by leaps and bounds."
Harkness has done much to stimulate the latter. His lacrosse team was the first eastern representative to demonstrate the sport in the Midwest where it has become very
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It's No Fun To Be Left Out
Last call is going out for those who wanted a trip to Europe for this summer. Space is just about booked solid on all tours and travel plans. Today is the time to see Downs for your reservations.
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Kansas To Fifth In UP Basketball Poll
New York—(U.P.)—Classy Kentucky, with an eye on its second straight national college basketball championship, topped the ratings of the United Press board of coaches for the fourth week in a row today as Illinois replaced Kansas State in second place.
The Wildcats, picked by coaches before the start of the campaign as the best bet for the national title, closed out their regular season Saturday with a 24-2 record and 18 straight victories.
Kansas moved up two places to the fifth position, on the basis of their outstanding win over Oklahoma A&M. A This marked Dr. F. C. Phog Allen's 700th basketball victory.
The 35 leading coaches who make up the rating board gave Kentucky 28 first place votes and a 333 out of a possible 350 points this week for the second highest point-total of the season. Illinois' 334 points on Jan. 16 was tops.
Coach Adolph Rupp's men, who already have won a berth in the NCAA tournament, begin play in the Southeastern Conference tourney, Wednesday night.—
The coaches based their ratings on games played through Saturday night, Feb. 23.
Illinois, which led the ratings for seven straight weeks before Kentucky took over, moved back into second place with two first place ballots and 289 points. The Illini (17-2) were 44 points behind the Wildcats.
Kansas State, upset by Colorado during the weekend for its fourth setback in 20 games, dropped back to third place with 215 points.
Among the other major changes in the ratings, Kansas (18-2) and St. Louis (20-5) each jumped two places from last week; St. John's of Brooklyn (20-2) advanced one notch, and Wyoming (23-5) moved into the top 10 for the first time this season.
Duquesne, upset by Villanova for its first defeat in 19 games, retained fourth place with one first place vote and 174 points.
Behind the Dukes, Kansas, St Louis, the Washington Huskies (22-4), St. John's and Iowa (17-2) were
bunched closely for the succeeding five places.
Team Points
1. Kentucky (28) 24-2) ... 333
2. Illinois (2) (17-2) ... 289
3. Kansas State (16-4) ... 215
4. Duquesne (1) (18-1) ... 174
5. Kansas (18-2) ... 153
6. St. Louis (1) (20-5) ... 149
7. Washington (1) (22-4) ... 132
8. St. John's (20-2) ... 124
9. Iowa (17-2) ... 117
10. Wyoming (1) (23-5) ... 50
Bob Kenney Has Measles
Bob Kenney, stellar performer on KU's basketball team, was stricken with measles after last night's game with Missouri.
Kenney entered Watkins Memorial hospital, this morning, to undergo observations to determine what type of measles he had contacted.
"Trigger" contributed ten points in last night's game with Missouri, and he will probably be lost for the Omaha game, Saturday at Norman.
Basketball Scores
Notre Dame 75, NYU 74
Holy Cross 75. St John's (NY) 70
Boston U 98. New Hampshire 78
Cincinnati 76. Syracuse 78
Loyola (LA) 58. South Lauderdale 55
Bowling Green 68. Marquette 67
Cincinnati 45
Drake 67. Creighton 53
Tulsa 62. Detroit 44
Indiana 94. Ohio State 80
Nebraska 53. New York 52
Iowa 64. Michigan State 52
Kansas 65. Missouri 54
Two of the Big Seven's brightest runners will try to complete triples in their specialties at the 24th conference Indoor track and field meet this weekend in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium.
One of them is Herb Semper, red-haired Kansas distance ace who will be gunning for his third consecutive Two-Mile crown. The other is Jerry Meader, hard-pounding Oklahoma quarter-miler who will be seeking his third straight pennant in that event.
If they succeed in retaining their titles for the second time they will be the 15th and 16th performers to turn the trick since the Indoor carnival was inaugurated in 1922. This is no meager feat, especially in view of the fact that the triple eluded such talented all-timers as Gene Littler, famed Nebraska redhead, Bob Simmons, another great Husker quartermiler; Bill Lyda, one-time NCAA 880 champion from Oklahoma; Bill McGuire, Missouri miler; Tom Scofield, Kansas high-jumper; Herb Hoskins, Kansas State broadjumper; and Shot-putters Sam Francis, Nebraska, Elmer Hackney, Kansas State.
Big Seven Stars Try For Triples In League Meet
Even Nebraska's Don Cooper, first collegian to vault 15 feet outdoors, and his contemporary, Bill Carroll, of Oklahoma, who scored 14-5 at the 1950 Kansas Relays, couldn't put together three Indoor •championships.
Page 5
Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952
Both Semper and Meader are good bets to win the triple crowns. However, both will be under pressure. Semper will be doubling the
University Daily Kansan
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mile, and thus must come back later Saturday evening in his favorite distance.
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He already has proved he can carry the burden in KU's first two meets against Kansas State and Nebraska. He coasted a 4:21 Mile behind Wes Santee against the Wildcats then galloped 9:26.1 in the longer haul. Last Saturday against Nebraska he moved his Mile down to 4:17.9 and still had enough left to unravel a 9:30.4 Two Mile. Up to Saturday's dress rehearsal meets at Columbia, Manhattan and Lincoln, these are the two swiftest Two-miles among Big Seven competitors.
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Come in and see our varied selection of Eaton's famous Open Stock letter papers. The quality is wonderful — so the value. You'll find among the tints, textures and styles one that suits you perfectly.
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Fraser Theatre
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.
Feb.27,28,29,March1
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Present I-D Cards for Reserve Seat at Ticket Office Green Hall Open Daily 9-12, 1-4
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952
One Of Britain's Top Directors Says Movies Need Producers
New York—(U.P.)The movie producer may well deserve many of the brickbats hurled at him but he is an essential fellow in a healthy film industry, says Carol Reed, one of Britain's top directors
In America for a quick business" look-around, Mr. Reed, who made "The Third Man" movie among many other successes, pointed to the situation in his own country as an example of what can happen when the producer vanishes.
"When J. Arthur Rank practically took over the British film industry a few years ago he was of the opinion that, since there were a lot of top-flight directors on hand, the only thing necessary was to let them go ahead and make pictures on their own.
"The result was that the producer practically dropped out of the picture there. And the result of that was that soon there was no one to run things." Mr. Reed said.
"Now a first-class director naturally wants to have a lot of autonomy, but there has to be that fellow sitting in the office to keep all the loose ends together. Otherwise you get a lot of opportunities to work on longer exist on a substantial business basis and things generally go to pot.
"Whatever sins may or not be charged against Hollywood, the industry there as least is functioning sturdily in a business-like manner under the guidance of producers," Mr. Reed said.
Mr. Reed, king as a chase and suspense king, went far afield from his usual style to make his latest film. It is "Outcast of the Islands" based on the Joseph Conrad novel of the same name. He made it against natural backgrounds in the South seas with such British players as Sir Ralph Richardson, Robert Morley and Wendy Hiller. Loper Films will release it here in the spring.
Latter Day Saints Youth Group
Hears Chancellor Murphy
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy spoke to the Young People's group of Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ, Latter Day Saints Sunday evening.
The meeting was held at the home of Ammon Andes, associate professor of aeronautical engineering, 1642 Indiana street. Dr. Murphy's subject was "Implications of Socialized Medicine."
Stateswomen, 6 to 7.15 p.m.
Wednesday, Hawk's Nest.
Official Bulletin
ASC pictures for Jayhawker will be taken at Hoch. 8:15 p.m. today.
Red Pepper pictures will be taken at 8:30 p.m. today, Hoch auditorium. Wear uniforms.
Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room. Wear uniforms for pledging.
Jay James, 9:30 p.m. today. Hoch auditorium, for pictures to be taken.
auditorium, for pictures to be taken Journalism students and others interested, off-the-record talk and discussion with Albert Ravenholt, expert on Far Eastern affairs, 7 p.m. Wednesday, AWS lounge
HAJAS meeting, 1915 Wednesday, 105 Military Science bldg. Interesting film to be shown.
Junior Panhellenic, 4:30 today,
Chi Omega house.
Hui O Hawaiiana No Ka Oe 7:30 p.m. today, 131 Strong. Bring Ukes and plenty Kokua.
Phi Mu Alpha, 7 p.m. Wednesday,
131 Strong. Pledges must attend.
Tryouts for "College Daze" to night, Wednesday and Thursday, 7-10 p.m. Military Science bldg.
The following are notified to appear before Student court at 7:30 p.m. today, Court room, Green hall: Kenneth Lee Hoffman, M. Stul, Bob Rupp, William E. Kusunki Jr., Roth Gatwood, Barbara, Rob Thomas, Elliott E. B, Pringle, Richard E. Burnett, Melville B. Evans, V. Davis, William H. Pringle, Irvin D. Brown, Mrs. Virginia Cook, Haroldeen Young.
Arnold Air society, new starting time, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday. All advanced AFROTC cadets wishing to join attend meeting.
Openings for editor and business manager for K-Book, K-Calendar and Student directory, written applications to be submitted to BO department of mph office deadline March 1. For details contact Bill Stinson.
El Ateneo se reunira el miercoles,
27 de felirero a las 7:30 en 113
Strong, musica, bailes, y conversacion.
Alpha Phi Omega 7:15 tonight, 417 Snow, members and pledges attend.
Chess club, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday.
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John Hipp, engineering senior, was recently elected president of Scarab, professional fraternity for architects, for the spring semester.
Terrill's
803 Mass.
Other officers are Frank Walter, vice-president; Charles Steele, secretary; Eddie Maag, treasurer; Calvin Spradley, pledge trainer, and William Beckley Hayward, scrapbook chairman.
Scarab Fraternity Elects New Officers
Scarab has also pledged eight men. They are George Emrich, Douglas Gill, Robert Stearns, engineering seniors; Earle Alexander, John Hoffman, Robert Koppes, Harold Stover, engineering juniors, and Robert Jones, engineering sophomore.
Art Education Club Coffee
Art Education Club
The Art Education club held an art conference in 22 to discuss what help the club could give to the high school art conference.
Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, is sponsor of the group.
Tau Sigma, 7:15 today, Robinson gvn.
KuKu pictures for Jayhawker to be taken 7:15 p.m. today, Hoch auditorium.
111 Strong.
Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, 203 Strong, Dr. Marc
Krasner.
Phyllis Beyer Engaged To Sabetha Man
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Beyer, Sabeth, announce the engagement of their daughter, Phyllis Jeanne, to Charles Kidwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Kidwell, also of Sabeth.
Miss Beyer is a college sophomore. Mr. Kidwell is employed at Sabetha.
3 Pledge Alpha Tau Omega
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity announces the pledging of James Schmidt, engineering freshman from Wichita; Adrian Brubaker, engineering freshman from Lawrence, and Daniel Haegert, fine arts freshman from Topeka.
The great brown Monarch butterfly secretes an acid fluid which is distasteful to birds, making it immune from their attacks.
4 Men Pledge Theta Tau
Four men recently pledged These Tau engineering fraternity. They are Robert Lamb, engineering freshman, Goodland; Clarence Walker, engineering senior, St. Joseph, Mo.; Richard Backman, engineering freshman, Vliets, and William Mains, engineering freshman, Topeka.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 7
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TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange and international travel whether tours on, in, or abroad are undertaken. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. **tf**
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BUSINESS SERVICE
OREAD BARBER SHOP for expert barber service on the Hill. 8:00 to 5:30 Cleaning in Laundry and Dry Cleaning Charles Coffman and Hard Borst, 127 1DRE, 27
TYPING: Experienced in reports term papers, theses, notes and stencil cutting. Prompt attention given. Phone 1952W, Mrs. Robert Lewis, 1915 Tenn.
TYPIST: References; prompt, accurate service and late model Royal typewriter. Convenient to KU Bring to 1724 Indiana or call Mrs. Blesner. 3011r. T
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop. 733 M.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
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A BOOK-EASEM marks any reference
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SPECIAL RATES for students on Time, Life, and Fortune magazines. We take subscriptions to all magazines. P.S. You rebate too. Student Union Book Store.
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Interviews
Personnel representatives from 10 companies will interview June graduates in Marvin hall this week.
Tuesday
Factory Insurance association representative interview engineer in all fields
Mallinckrodt Chemical works want chemical, mechanical and electrical engineers and chemists.
Aluminum Company of America is interested in mechanical, metallurgical, electrical and chemical engineers.
Westinghouse Electric corporation can employ electrical and mechanical engineers and engineering physicists.
Wednesday
Bailey Meter company has opened a
electrical, electrical and
chemical equipment
Shell Oil company can use chemists and chemical engineers
Thursday
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There is not much strife yet between the races of that region of Africa because contact between Europeans and natives is recent, he said, but there is strife among the natives.
Tells Problems Of East Africa
The British have the problem of grafting 900 years of civilization onto the culture of the natives of East Africa, John B. George of the Institute of Current World Affairs said on the Sociology on the Air broadcast over KLWN Sunday.
The population is made up of 17 million natives, 150 thousand Asiatic, brought in by the British when building railroads, and 50 thousand Europeans.
Teaching democratic government to the natives is a great task since they live in an iron age culture, Mr. George said.
He was interviewed in the broadcast by Nino LoBello, instructor of sociology.
"Race problems are still under control in the area," he added. "They do not have unrest to the degree that they cannot settle it."
There is no common denominator language in East Africa, Mr. George said. Each tribe has its own language and there has also been an emigrant from Europe and Asia. This makes a real Tower of Babel, he said.
Mr. George also gave a description of the everyday life of the East African natives and of the geography of the area.
Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952
Sunday is bath day for donkeys, goats, and other animals on Barbados, easternmost of West Indies islands. Cattlewash, a village on the Barbados coast, owes its name to the act the word implies.
Shell Oil.
Friday
Jefferson Chemical company will interview chemical and mechanical engineers.
Interested persons should sign schedule in engineering office.
N-O-W!
GANGWAY... FOR THE GUYS WITH GUTS...
AND COLD STEEL!
FIXED
BAYONETS
RICHARD BASEHART
MICHAEL O'SHEA GENE EVANS
CHING WILLY LAMPTOWER RICHARD WILTON
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GANGWAY... FOR THE GUYS WITH GUTS...
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FIXED BAYONETS
RICHARD BASEHART
MICHAEL OSHEA GENE EVANS
Mat. 2:30-Eve. 7and 9 p.m.
Features: 3:03-7:20-9:25
Also: Color Cartoon-News
SOON!!
TYRONE POWER
ANN BLYTH
I'll NEVER FORGET YOU
20th Anniversary
COLOR by TECHNICOLOR
GRANADA
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Tom-Tom Totals Twisted; Tiger Tale Truthfully Told
By ROGER YARRINGTON
The Missouri Tigers don't know the score and apparently think the Javahawkers don't either.
When the traditional KU-MU tom-tom was given to Sachem this year as a result of the Jayhawkers' 41-28 truncing of the Tigers the past December, it was noted that a few of the scores had been changed.
The tom-tom is painted with the Kansas colors on one side and the Missouri colors on the other. On each side is a listing of the scores of the KU-MU games. The scores are listed for as far back as 1892. When the scores were listed over to this year the listings credited KU with only three wins.
Sachem turned the drum over to the Student Union for display. Being very conscientious about its
work and unwilling to display the trophy with incorrect scores, the Student Union bookstore looked up the correct scores and changed the listings on the drum.
Now the tom-tom tells the true story, 28 wins for KU, 25 wins for MU and 7 ties. It is on display in the main corridor of the Union.
The Tigers may be surprised to know that the Jayhawks know the score—that is if they ever get the drum back again. They had their chance to beat KU last night, but the Jayhawks won 65-54. So it's now 29 wins for KU and time for another paint job.
Of the 13 varieties of snakes that are found in New England, only two—the timber rattlesnake and the copperhead—are poisonous.
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWER
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SHOWS 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00
COME EARLY FOR SEATS
Walt Disney presents JERRY
DEAN MARTIN and LEWIS
HAIL WALLIS PRODUCTION
SAILOR BEWARE
Late News Events Color Cartoon "STUPID CUPID" Adm. 14c - 60c
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY
2 Unusual, Daring Pictures -- -- Unreservedly
Recommended To Adult Movie-Goers -- --
FIVE
FOUR MEN AND ONE WOMAN
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Arch Oboler's Suspense
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starting DAVID WAYNE · HOWARD DA SILVA · FUTURE ADDI with Martin Gubel · Stace Bradley · Blaumond Burke
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952
1950
TO PRESENT RECITAL WEDNESDAY—Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of cello, and his wife, Alberfa, who plays the piano, will present a recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Strong auditorium.
X-Ray Device An Aid To Research Programs
H. W. Pickett of the General Electric Industrial x-ray section, Milwaukee, demonstrated the University's diffraction unit yesterday in Lindley hall.
Mr. Pickett conducted a check-up of the instrument and explained some of the finer points of its uses.
The x-ray diffraction unit, which can detect the atomic structure of various crystalline materials, has been used by the departments of mining and metallurgy, petroleum engineering, chemistry and geology, and the State Geological survey
Dr. J. O. Maloney, executive director of research foundation, explained that "X-ray diffraction is a process of showing by pattern the atomic structure of crystalline materials and is a method of mineral identification that will prove useful not only in basic scientific research but also in industrial research."
He also pointed out that Miss Ada Swineford, formerly associated with the Pennsylvania State college x-ray laboratories and now in charge of the petrographic laboratory of the State Geological survey,
Deferment Test Deadline April 24
James K. Hitt, registrar, urges male students who have not taken the test to take it now.
Students wishing to take the college qualification test April 24 must apply for entrance before March 10 Entrance forms are at the registrar's office or any draft board.
After July 1 the test scores will be used to give deferments to pre-medicine students. Mr. Hitt said that ROTC students should take the test in they leave the program.
The applicant must be a selective service registrant who intends to request occupational deferment as a student. He must be satisfactorily pursuing a full-time college course leading to a degree.
No student who has previously taken the test may repeat it.
Jayhawker Pictures To Be Taken Tonight
The following groups will have their pictures taken tonight at Hoch auditorium for the Jayhawker.
7:15 p.m., Jay Janes; 7:30 p.m. Delta Phi Delta; 7:45 p.m., Women' Glee club.
7 to 8 p.m.
8 to 9 p.m.
8 p.m., YWCA cabinet; 8:15 p.m.
All Student Council; 8:30 p.m., Red
Peppers.
9 to 10 p.m.
9 p.m., Inter-fraternity council;
9:15 p.m, Kuku club; 9:30 p.m, Owl society; 9:45 p.m, Pi Tau Sigma.
10 p.m., Tau Beta Pi; 10:15 p.m.
Alpha Kappa Psi; 10:30 p.m,
YMCA cabinet; 10:45 p.m, Sigma
Tau.
--has demonstrated the usefulness of the x-ray diffraction techniques in the study of Kansas clays and other economic minerals.
The department of mining and metallurgy is now laying groundwork for studying x-ray diffraction the characteristics of metals and alloys, according to Kenneth Rose, chairman.
Dr. C. F. Weinaug, chairman of the petroleum engineering department, is currently conducting a study of oil well cores which involves the use of the x-ray unit.
Prof. Paul W. Gilles of the chemistry department is finding x-ray diffraction valuable in solving many problems involving both qualitative and quantitative analyses and in the study of crystalline organic compounds.
The department of geology plans to use the unit in teaching advanced mineralogy under the supervision of Dr. R. M. Dreyer, professor of geology.
The recording of x-ray patterns is done by means of a Geiger tube and a special recording device or photographs, Dr. Maloney said. In the photographic process a small quantity of the sample is placed at the center of a cylindrical camera holding the film, and x-rays are aimed at the sample through a special slit in front of the x-ray tube.
Youth Found Guilty Of Indecent Exposure
An 18-year-old janitor, employed by the University, was found guilty of indecent exposure in a private hearing in police magistrate court Monday.
He was given the choice of a 60-day sentence or a parole in the custody of Dr. Sigmund Gundler, health service psychiatrist. He chose the parole.
The janitor was arrested at 9 a.m. by the campus police, and taken to the Lawrence police station where he was charged with indecent exposure.
Quack Club To Give Ballet
NROTC Unit To Hear U.S. Navy Chaplain
Capt. Frank R. Hamilton of the U. S. Navy Chaplain Corps, will speak to midshipmen of the University's NROTC unit today.
A water ballet. "A Trip Around the World." will be presented at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday by the Quack club in the Robinson pool.
Captain Hamilton will speak to the midshipmen in three one-hour sessions, starting at 1 p.m. The purpose of Captain Hamilton's visit is to provide the NROTC midshipmen with indoctrination lectures on the place of the chaplain in the Navy.
The show is comparable to skating or dancing formations, performed in a less restrictive manner, June Porter, president of the club, said.
Tickets may be obtained for 75 cents at the women's physical education office in Robinson, from members of the club or at the door before the show.
Colorful costumes and unusual lighting effects are highlights of the ballet, she said.
"The ballet, portraying scenes from various countries, will include: "Skaters Waltz": "Pep'O Mey Heart"; "A Little Church in England"; In a Persian Market"; In Red Stairs in the Chinese Garden; In Dogs' Garden; In a Chinese Garden." "Blues" from "An American in Paris" and "Rhumba Rhymes."
The entire cast will present "Sentimental Journey" and "America the Beautiful" in floating formation.
Captain Hamilton's itinerary includes visits to all universities in the ninth naval district which have NROTC units.
Tatjana Plume Walker, graduate student from Riga, Latvia, will be a feature of both the Latvian and Austrian Olympic teams.
Guest divers will be Dallas Chestnut, education freshman; Archie Unruh and Robert Wellborn, education seniors, and Jerry Jester, education junior, a comic diver.
Win Koerper, college senior, and Kenneth Dam, college sophomore, received superior rankings in the University of Nebraska Invitational Debate and Speech tournament held Feb. 22 and 23 in Lincoln.
Debaters Win Superior Honors
Koerper received an over-all ranking of superior in debate, the highest rank obtainable for debaters. Dam received a award in the discussion event. The two also won a superior ranking as a team.
Other University students participating in the tournament were Heywood Davis and Stephen Rench, college seniors.
The two-day affair consisted of contests in debate, discussion, and extemporary speaking. KU speakers won three of its eight debates.
The four participants accompanied by Kim Giffin, assistant professor of speech, left Lawrence Thursday night following the Oratorical contest in which Koerper participated.
The problems presented by clay in connection with oil drilling were discussed by Ben B. Cox, director of the geological division of Gulf Research and Development company, Pittsburgh, Pa., before a student geology group at Lindley hall last Thursday;
Mr. Cox outlined the physical properties, structures and chemical composition of various clays as applied to petroleum geology. This included the problems and tools of the oil industry and research in the control of clay properties.
Expert Discusses Oil Drilling In Clay
While on the campus he visited the laboratories of the State Geological survey and the department of geology. He conferred with Miss Ada Swineford, chairman of the survey's petrographic laboratory, and Norman Plummer, in charge of the survey's ceramics division.
Mr. Cox said that "clay minerals and clay deposits compose about 80 per cent of sedimentary material of the earth.
KU Graduate Dies In Indiana
Dr. Carl Frederick Lindberg, 57, who received his doctor's degree in 1933 from the University, died Feb. 18, at Porter Memorial hospital in Valparaiso, Ind. He was head of the department of education and psychology and a member of the Valparaiso university faculty for 18 years. Author of many articles on Christian education, he belonged to leading societies and organizations in the education field.
News Roundup Five Killed,12 Injured In Wreck At Omaha Air Base
Omaha, Neb.—(U.P.) —Five men were killed and 12 were injured today when a Strategic Air Command B-50 bomber, carrying "classified" equipment, crashed and burned while landing at Offutt Air Force base on a flight from Honolulu.
The four-engined plane lost a wing as it came in for a landing about 20 yards from the end of the runway at 2:30 a.m.
Five hours after the crash, the Air Force announced that the flight from Hickam Field was a "regular and routine" mission. Earlier, it had indicated that the flight was "classified" but later noted that the ship, "like most SAC craft," carried "classified," or secret, equipment.
Six of the 17 men aboard may have been servicemen who "hitched" a ride from Honolulu to Omaha.
Combat Nears Halt On Korean Fronts
An Eighth Army communique said there was no significant contact with the enemy on the ground except, on the central front, where UN patrols fought light engagements with Red units up to two squads in strength.
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea — (U.P.) The Korean war came to an almost complete halt both in the air and on the ground today.
Over 14 sorties were flown by Fifth Air Force planes because of the almost solid overcast over North Korea.
Lattimore Denies Pro-Red Leanings
Washington— (U.P) —Far Eastern expert Owen Lattimore today denied charges that the Institute of Pacific Relations .was Communist-dominates and that he had pro-Communist leanings.
The Johns Hopkins university professor filed a 50-page statement with the Senate internal security committee, which called him at an open session as a witness in its long study of the IPR, a private research organization. He previously appeared before the committee behind closed doors.
Possible Red Stall Seen By Negotiators
Pamunjum, Korea—(U.P.)-T h e United Nations command said tonight that Communist truce negotiators may be stalling to delay a cease-fire until May day a Red holocaisefire until May day a traditional Red holiday, or to cover preparations for a spring offensive.
Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's headquarters broadcast the charge from Tokyo in a "voice of the UN Command" program as Red negotiators here rejected an Allied compromise offer designed to break the deadlock
over policing a truce.
Chinese Col. Pu Shan categorically refused to drop Russia from the proposed neutral truce supervision commission despite the UN offer to match the gesture by withdrawing Norway.
Ban On Coverage Arouses Protests
Rep. Paul W. Shafet (R-Mich.) called the order "one of the rarest examples of censorship" he'd ever seen.
Washington—(U.P.)—Congressmen and housewives joined the broadcasting industry today in protesting Speaker Sam Rayburn's ban on radio and television coverage of House committee sessions.
As it became apparent that the public will see and hear much less of congress in action, housewives began objecting to the ban on televised sessions of Congressional activities, which they regard as welcome breaks from daily dusting a diaper-changing.
There was no indication, however, that Rayburn will back down or that the House itself will modify the Texas Democrat's ruling.
McDonald Promises No Favors In RFC
Washington—(U.P.)—Harry A. McDonald took charge of the Reconstruction Finance corporation today with a promise to keep political favoritism out of the agency's lending operations.
"I am under political obligation to no one," the new administrator told a reporter. "You can be sure we are not going to give anything away."
McDonald, a Republican who formerly headed the Securities and Exchange commission won Senate approval Tuesday. Monday after a seven-week delay.
The Senate banking committee held up action on the appointmen until McDonald was informally "cleared" by a House committee which is currently investigating the Securities Exchange Commission.
In 1895, the headgear of U.S. Marines was a spiked helmet.
UNION CAB
PHONE
2800 65
10
YOUR EYES
should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated.
Lawrence Optical Co.
Phone 425 1025 Mass.
W
Announcing...
the reopening of the
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Drive-in
ICE CREAM - SUNDAES - MALTS - SHAKES
QUARTS - PINTS
1835 Mass.
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AB 65
49th Year. No. 98
We Must Accept Brotherhood Murphy Says
The average American must accept interracial and interfaith brotherhood as a practical necessity for a successful, long range foreign policy, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said Tuesday.
"Our foreign policy has been somewhat baffling and often one of expediency for the moment rather than a long range policy," he told more than 250 persons attending the sixth annual Brotherhood dinner of the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy at the First Congregational church parish house.
The American democracy success story has become an "infectious virus" he said, "and has caused many of these peoples to follow our lead and aspire to freedom and an increased standard of living.
With the shrinking of the globe, "we have acquired a diversity of neighbors who share common denomensators with us. If we cannot create a foreign policy based on the logic of our own world are grasping their right to human dignity we cannot hope to have peace," he emphasized.
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1959
Chancellor Murphy called for America to face the "essential realities of 1952 instead of 1900" in order to formulate a long range foreign policy. He maintained that all the people of the world are becoming each others' neighbors in a real way.
"friendship cannot be bought with dollars," he contended. People need the knowledge necessary to allow them to convert the material resources under their feet, he said, more easily than the United States should be exporting its knowledge rather than its dollars." he added.
The Chancellor contended that the real problem is "not to be so naive as to think our capital alone can raise the world's standard of living." The solution, he believes, lies in an expanded program of exchanging students, teachers and experts in many technical fields.
There is no question as to rearming, he said. "When there is a mad dog loose in the world, we should buckle on our armor. This buckling of on the armor is only part of a long range policy," he added.
However, to prove we are not being hypocritical, Chancellor Murphy said, "we must follow our ideals, continue to minimize our prejudices and critically determine if we are to continue to support certain imperialistic practices of eastern nations."
'Trip Around World Water Ballet Theme
The Quack club will present a water ballet, "A Trip Around the World," at 8 p.m. tonight and Thursday in the Robinson pool.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tickets may be obtained for 75 cents at the women's physical education office at Robinson and at the door before the show.
A stop sign will be placed at the exit of zone H, northeast of Bailey Chemical laboratories today. All cars leaving the 'zone must stop for Sunflower road traffic.
Tatjana Plume Walker, graduate student from Riga, Latvia, will be a featured swimmer. She has been a member of both the Latvian and Austrian Olympic teams.
The ballet, portraying scenes from various countries, will include; "Skater's Waltz," "Peg O'My Heart," "In A Chinese Garden," and "Blues" from An American in Paris.
New Traffic Sign; Parking Changes
Beginning Thursday, 16th street from the University garage west to Sunnyside avenue will be a free parking area. Zone S will extend east from the University garage to Sunflower road. Signs will designate the two areas.
There are on changes in University parking regulations in zone T as was reported in a Kansas earlier this week.
Flow Of Ideas By Education, Lecturer Says
The migration of ideas is better explained by education than by war, Dr. Gilbert Highet, professor of Latin at Columbia university, said last night in the second lecture of the humanities series in Fraser theater.
One part of history is the study of groups in competition and war, Dr. Highet said. "But the human race cannot have come so far with just competition."
There are more people on earth than ever before, he said. And with the increase in population, more social and technological progress is being made. The explanation of education is not to replace political or economic ideas of origin, but to fill them out, he added.
"History moves faster by education than by war. The periods of civilizations are the periods of the flow of ideas throughout the world. Civilization is not only material wealth, it has to have a meaning."
"The chief justification of conquest is the civilization of the conquered in which techniques or ideas are taught." This is one of the conquered teach the conquered such as the case of Christianity, he continued.
Leap Year Dance To Feature Dogpatch Theme, Decorations
All proceeds from the dance will go to the AWS Memorial Scholarship fund. In addition to the free music of the Aliblirus trio, the AWS has received donations from the Safeway store, Lawrence Paper company, Lawrence Journal-World and the Student Union bookstore.
Another change in previous plans brings the Alibirus trio to provide the music for dancing. Original plans called for records. The trio, which will donate its services free for the dance, is composed of Donald Conard, engineering junior; Albert Hedstrom, college sophomore, and Bill Krehbiel, engineering sophomore.
Dogpatch, traditional home of Sadie Hawkins, the original leap year genius, is the new theme of the Associated Women Students' Leap Year dance to be held Friday.
The sweater and skirt dance will be held from 8 p.m. to midnight in the Hawk's Nest. Since this is the women's opportunity to impress their dates, they are requested to begin by buying the tickets. Tickets may be purchased in organized houses from AWS representatives or at the information booth.
Decorations, cartoons and signs will portray the famous village and its residents, the Yokums, Daisy Mae and their friends.
Intermission entertainment will be provided by the Dead Beats, faculty orchestra introduced to the campus at the AWS Faculty Follies in December. Members of the combo include Lawrence S. Bee, professor of home economics and sociology; Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology; E. O. Stene, professor of political science; C. F. Weinaug, professor of petroleum engineering.
Kenneth E. Rose, associate professor of mining engineering; Karel Blaas, assistant professor of musical theory; Charles Oldfather, assistant professor of law; Leo Horacek, instructor in musical education; Raymond Zepp, instructor in band, and James K. Hitt, registrar.
New Science Building Will Be Ideally Equipped For Study, Research
Bv RON KULL
The building will include laboratories, classrooms, research facilities, new apparatus and a huge scientific library. It will be divided in three parts to accommodate the needs of physics, and pharmacy departments.
An opportunity for greater scientific expansion will be given to KU in 1953 when its new science building, laid on its first stages of construction, is completed.
The east wing and lower half of the center section will be the chemistry section. The six story wing will house laboratories for graduate and undergraduate courses in organic, inorganic, analytic and physical chemistry.
In connection with these laboratories are balance rooms, apparatus rooms and supply and record rooms. Adequate space has been allotted
for offices for the senior staff, chairmen and laboratory directors. Study rooms will be available for graduate students.
The basement under the east wing and the center section will contain apparatus for research in radio chemistry. There will be a small maintenance shop with facilities for instruction in glassblowing.
The pharmacy department, located in the upper half of the center section, will have more laboratory and lecture space.
The top floor of the center wing will house a new scientific library with two study rooms. This library has three classrooms in the three departments.
The physics department will be
Four basement rooms will be kept at a constant temperature for research and storage of perishable supplies.
This section will be equipped with lecture rooms, laboratories and the equipment to teach atomic physics, optics, electronics and other divisions of physics. Twenty-five research rooms will be dispersed throughout the wing.
located in the five story west wing of the new science building.
The basement will contain most of the heavy equipment. A three million volt electro-static generator will furnish power for experimentation.
Electrical distribution throughout the wing will be made from a main switchboard. The switchboard is 20 feet long and has approximately 1,000 outlets and circuit breakers.
Also in the basement will be an extensive machine shop, a feature that is sadly lacking in Blake hall, the present physics building.
Fry Comedy To Begin At 8 Tonight In Fraser
"The Lady's Not For Burning," the University's third major play of the year, will open at 8 o'clock tonight in Fraser theater and continue through Saturday, March 1. ID cards will admit
Dance Tickets Go On Sale
Tickets sales have begun at organized houses for the all-student dance. Campus sales will begin next week in the information booth and at the entrance to the Hawk's Nest.
Each ticket will count as a vote for queen of the all-student dance, sponsored by the junior and senior classes, at 9 p.m. Saturday, March 9, in Hoch auditorium.
Pictures of the queen candidates have been sent to Tony Pastor. He will select one representative from each class.
The queen will be chosen from those four on the basis of which class has the highest attendance at the dance. A separate ballot box will be provided for each class.
Don Hull, college senior and president of his class, will be the master of ceremonies at the queen presentation during the dance intermission.
Phil Kassebaum, college junior, and Helen Maduros, education senior, are co-chairmen of the dance. Virginia Mackey, journalism junior, is in charge of publicity, and Blaine Scheideman, education junior, is in charge of ticket sales.
Although the two classes have had dances together in previous years, they have never had a name-band.
Tickets for the dance are $1.50 each. Spectator's tickets are 75 cents each.
Husband-Wife To Present Recital
Raymond Stuhl, cellist, and Mrs. Alberta Stuhl, pianist, will appear in a recital at 8 p.m. today in Strong auditorium.
Mr. Stuhl, associate professor of cello, studied with the Hungarian virtuoso, Paul Hermann. At the Royal Academy of Music of Berlin he was a member of the cello class of Prof. Hugo Becker.
Mr. Stuhl returned to the U. S. in 1930 after a five year period of study, concerts and teaching in Europe.
He was chairman of the cello department of the Conservatory of Music in Kansas City. He played two seasons in the Philharmonic orchestra under Karl Krueger.
He has specialized in introducing and promoting interest in the stringed instruments by playing at the orchestra and high schools in the southwest.
Mrs. Stuhl, former instructor in piano at the University, did her advanced study at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia.
The recital is open to the public.
Folk Songs Feature Carillon Program
Four English folk songs will be played on today's carillon program at 7 p.m. by Ronald Barnes, carillonneur.
They are "The Keeper," "Driving Away at the Smoothing Iron," "Hares On the Mountains" and "Blow Awake the Morning Dew."
Other numbers on the program include:
"Angelus" by Massenet, "The Old Refrain" by Kreisler, "Sonata for a Musical Clock" by Handel, Theme and Variations for carillon by Rusterholtz and "Abide With Me" by W. H. Monk.
The play, by Christopher Fry, has been called by critics as his "most richly rewarding" one to date.
A New York Herald-Tribune critic referred to the play as "a poetic fantasy of sheer delight which brings back to the theater the eloquence and excitement of illusion that it should always have."
In the play an arrogant world-sick ex-soldier meets a girl who is called a witch because she wishes to live her life independently. They meet by accident in the small market town of Cool Clary, England, in the 15th century, "more or less, or exactly," as Fry says, and have a hard time explaining themselves to the authorities and to each other.
Astonishment is the key to much of the humor and the engrossing progression of events. The ex-soldier's insistence upon being hanged for crimes he did not commit has a series of savage comic twists, while the lovely innocence of the lady condemned to burning confounds even those who are convinced she is a sorceress. The surprise of their joint predicaments has been exploited by Fry with a wealth of pertinent dialogue.
Bob Allen, KLWN announcer, will play the role of the soldier, the sardonic Thomas Mendip, who wishes for death so fiercely that it is clear how deeply he cares for life..
Mary Lou Jukes, graduate student, will play Jennet, the lady of the title, who dines with her peacock and is sainer than anyone surrounding her.
Lynn Osborn, college senior, and Dee Price, fine arts freshman, will play Richard and Alizon, the lovers in a subsidiary marriage. Mrs. Molly Krival, wife of Arthur S. Krival, instructor in English, will play Margaret Devize, flutter-brained sister of Mayor Hebbie Tyson, played by George Herman, instructor in English.
Sam Sebesta, education junior, will be seen as a drowsy violin playing chaplain, and Allen Crafton, professor of speech, as Matthew the rag and bones man whose supposed death causes all the complications.
Others in the play include William J. Sollner, assistant instructor of English, as Humphrey Devize; James Clausen, college junior, as Nicholas Devize, and Dan Palmquist, instructor of speech, as Edwin Poinnay, Joseph Lewis, steward, education senior, will be the prompter.
Harold Harvey, instructor of speech, built the set.
Pershing Rifle Squad Gives Precision Drill
Nine members of the Pershing Rifle Drill squad demonstrated precision rifle drill at an exhibition of the 137th National Guard Infantry company Tuesday night at the Community building.
The Pershing Rifles, an honorary Army fraternity, were led in the demonstration by Army Cadet John H. Evers, college junior. The exhibition featured a planation of heavy weapons used by the National Guard company.
Two Army training films and one film on the heavy weapons company were shown during the exhibition.
Professors Association
To Hear Murphy Tonight
Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will speak at a dinner meeting of the University chapter of the American Association of University Professors at 6 p.m. today at the Community building.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1952 Interpretive Articles
B
KEN
COLLINS
"Somehow, Emily, we don't seem to be as close as we used to be."
Editorials
Armed Forces Of U.S. Must Be Well Balanced
(Ed. Note—The guest editorial today is from the Feb. 7 issue of the Iowa State Daily. We think it still is appropriate.)
"To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace."
—George Washington
"Let him who desires peace prepare for war."
The Secretary of Defense has been called upon the carpet to clarify foggy issues concerning the air war in Korea. One of the big questions was whether the United States or the enemy has superior jets.
The Secretary said this country has done little since World War II to bolster its air power, and that not only has it diminished in numbers, but the planes have lacked modern design.
For example, the Secretary of Defense said the Korean MIG was by far superior to our jets in climbing speed.
It is too bad that Uncle Sam has not been on his toes in the aircraft field. With a program of Universal Military Training before Congress, it is more than important to stress the necessity of being prepared, not just in one field of warfare, but in all.
Congress is expected to enact into law the system of permanent peace-time conscription proposed by the UMT National Security Training Commission.
Such a plan would give the military a chance to grab men during an emergency, after they had received 6 months basic training. All men in UMT would be reservists and subject to call any time during the following $7 \frac{1}{2}$ years.
We realize that it is imperative that such a law be passed. It's certain that few young men feel kindly about giving a portion of their lives to the military. Even with this in mind, there is nothing to do but approve such legislative action. This country must be prepared for any sort of national emergency.
In the event of another world conflict, this country would not be given time to mobilize, without internal injury by long-range bombers, as it was during the last two world wars.
It's useless to guess how the next war will start or what military tactics the enemy may employ in the first few days. However, one can be certain that the nation which is prepared, equipped with a trained, mobilized army and an adequate air force, will hold the advantage.
If this country had been prepared in 1941, the war would have been much shorter, and perhaps less costly in lives. The long trek back to the hearts of the lands of our enemies might also have been shorter.
With the UMT program in operation, we will at least have an army on hand, an army of men learned and practiced in the ways of war. But we'll need the airplanes, tanks and munitions that it takes to support a strong fighting force.
UMT is a good thing. Being partially prepared isn't good enough these days.—muhm.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year add $1 a semester if in Lawrence. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except holidays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
Aneurin Bevan Might Disrupt NATO Plans If He Became Britain's Prime Minister
When Winston Churchill returned to England recently after his fund-raising campaign in Washington, he was greeted with 10,000 cheers and one audacious ieer.
"Audacious" is the word generally ascribed to Aneurin Bevan, the confirmed and constant member of her majesty's royal opposition. His needling criticism of current British policy destines him to become either the loneliest man in the world or the prime minister of England.
There is reason to suspect he covets the latter position. In fact, as early as 1830, then Prime Minister Lloyd George predicted that eventually Bevan would succeed to the post.
A militant Yankeephobe, "Nye" Bevan distrusts American-sponsored rearmament of Europe, contending that the economies of Continental countries will founder under the double burden of rearmament and reconstruction.
Bevan considers Russia a weak sister whose only hope of gaining ascendancy is by exploiting the weak economies of Europe and the poverty of Asia. He would cut down on arms production and channel the money to social welfare projects.
Because he controls almost one-fourth of the labor vote, Bevan's strength is to be reckoned with in a period of unstable British politics. He is a shrewd politician, a brilliant debater, and a competent executive.
Bevan was born in Southern Wales. He descended into the coal mines at the age of 13 and four years later became a union steward. His youth was spent in the black, grimy streets of a mining town. Through his life he has carried the
emotional scars of resentment and revenge, denouncing and vilifying the middle and upper classes of England.
Now, at 55, he is a comparatively young man on the English political scene even with his 23 consecutive years in parliament. Representing the Ebbw Vale district, he has never lost an election.
His unmaired record might have been his reason for ditching Clement Attlee last April. Some quarters believe Bevan resigned his cabinet post in anticipation of the Tory victory. He wanted no identification with the administration that increased medical costs on glasses and false teeth to raise taxes for guns.
The United States has this to consider: should Bevan ever come to the forefront as prime minister, it would break up the unity of NATO and disrupt our whole concept of Western defense. On the surface, this might seem remote. However Bevan has the vigor and ambition to regenerate the crumbling Labor party. Should he get control, it would be only one election step to the entrance of 10 Downing street.
There is some consolation in the fact that Bevan is a staunch anti-Communist. If it ever came to a showdown, the paunchy leftist undoubtedly would stick to traditional policy of friendship with the United States.
Our State department would do well to consider this eventuality. Any powerful group in the North Atlantic neighborhood lukewarm to the principle of positive collective security is a soft spot in the overall plan. Nye Bevan is representative of such a group. —Chuck Zuegner.
Letters:
Reader Submits Reasonable Ideas
To the Editor:
In regard to your editorial of Feb. 21, I would like to submit a few "reasonable" grounds for the language requirement. If you don't agree with the "mental discipline," "culture," and "grammar" advocates, try looking at the situation as an American citizen and prospective voter. Disregard the culture and grammar for a minute and think of the people who live in these countries in question.
People wonder why the government's foreign policy is in such a mess; one chief reason is the lack of understanding among nations—or should I say, lack of understanding on the part of the United States. Perhaps you didn't know about our chaotic foreign policy; if not, you should consult John Ise. The best way to "get acquainted" with other countries in the world is to study their language, learn their customs, and see another side to the American attitude of "What's in it for me?"
I must admit that an elementary language course can be very dull; however, so can fundamentals of economics, geography, and psychology. New terms must be learned to understand any elementary course. However, the literature and history of these countries which is studied in advanced courses is very interesting and informing.
However, we can't take the advanced courses without first passing those "dull" elementary courses. Give the teacher half a chance and he'll make the class interesting; on the other hand, if the instructor has to waste the period trying to help "bored" Jack, the-class will drag, little will be accomplished, and everyone (including the teacher) will heave a sigh of relief when the whistle blows. Remember-you get out of a class just what you put into it!
Elizabeth Hollis
Senior, Spanish education.
More Talk About Foreign Language
Dear Editor:
Lest previous replies to the Kansan's stand on the foreign language requirement be dismissed as self-serving, the observations of a ten-hour man are in order. For most of us, our interests lie without the field of languages, yet in them we find the stuff of which our native tongue is made. Ours is a synthetic language, a debtor to all others.
In Pollock and Maitland's "The History of English Law," after enumerating many common legal terms derived from French, the authors conclude, "One must go to the gallows to find an English institution." Shakespeare, Christopher Fry and their readers are indebted to all peoples for our language of beauty and utility. A knowledge of its background is essential to enjoying it, to comprehending it and using it. I do not ignore the benefits of the study of comparative grammar, but I am not much moved by the beauteous difference between a noun and a verb. It irritates me, however, when a speaker cannot link plural nouns with plural verbs. A speaker fails when his bad grammar upstages his good ideas.
The source of controversy may be the fact that the foreign language courses are not geared to the needs of most of us. I have long thought that a course like Greek-in-English should be offered which would include not only Greek but also Latin, French and German.
The foreign languages teach us the fundamentals of our own. Whatever else the student may gain in amity and in expanding intellect is net profit. Hasn't the editor noted the relish with which we ordinary students display our rudimentary knowledge of a foreign language? How often has he heard in casual conversations the words, "Parle vous Franceise?" or "Gesundheit!".
Richard W. Stavely Second year law.
'Beloved Country' Also An Operetta
Dear Sirs:
Since an entire editorial (Feb. 25) was devoted to the topic it is perhaps not presumptuous on my part to believe that a few more jobs could be added profitably to complement the previous discussion on the novel "Cry, the Beloved Country," by Alan Paton.
Besides appearing in book form and now on celluloid "Cry" was converted by Maxwell Anderson (who should need no descriptive adjectives) into a Broadway operetta called "Lost in the Stars." The adaptation from book to play was nicely done, some of Paton's prose fitting without change into the blank verse by Anderson, and the drama with Todd Duncan in the leading role was a successful presentation of the 1949-50 season.
The title for the play was taken from the lyrics of one of the songs in the operetta which plaintively suggested that although God promised to take special care of our "one little star" that . . .
1.
I've been walking through
night and the day
Till my eyes get weary and my head turns gray,
And sometimes it seems maybe God's gone away,
Forgetting the promise that we heard him say—
And we're lost out here in the stars—
Little stars, big stars
Blowing through the night,
And we're lost out here in the stars.
In addition to "Cry" the pen of Paton, leaving the field of the novel, has produced "Religious Faith and World Culture" which appeared on the scene only last month.
Richard Scott College junior
Rats eat about 200,000,000 bushels of grain each year in the United States, the National Geographic society reports.
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Medical Center Features Color TV For Teaching
The first color television system to be permanently installed for daily undergraduate and post graduate medical instruction in any medical school is in use at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City.
Made possible by private funds, the conversion of the two-year-old, state - purchased, black-and-white system to color TV insures better teaching of both students and teachers.
Color TV is also suitable for post-graduate courses to show new operative techniques to surgeons.
The entire surgical curriculum has been revised so new color TV can take its place to best teaching advantage. Techniques which formerly had to be shown again and again to each small group of two or three students can now be fully shown to a group of 40 students. Many surgical topics can be adequately illustrated only in life rather than by dead models or lantern slides.
The present junior medical students during their eleven week surgery course are required to attend a one and one-half hour session of color TV each morning for five days a week. There is an elective program continuing on TV until noon each day for residents and students who have free time.
The undergraduate and postgraduate medical curricula differ sharply. In undergraduate work, the medical student is taught fundamental surgical problems and minor and major surgical techniques. The teaching load is carried by the classroom instructor in undergraduate teaching.
The reverse is true in post-graduate training. The operating surgeon then describes minutely what he is doing and for what reasons. Here the classroom instructor acts largely as a moderator for the group, passing on questions over the intercommunication system to the operating surgeon.
An additional installation is a "silent cable" which uses headsets and a phone, and allows the classroom instructor or a professor-monitor to talk to the surgeon operating on video without the remarks
being audible to students. The classroom instructor can guide the operating surgeon toward the best field of view from the standpoint of the audience.
It's No Fun To Be Left-Out
Last call is going out for those who wanted a trip to Europe for this summer. Space is just about booked solid on all tours and travel plans. Today is the time to see Downs for your reservations.
Invalid Thrift Coupon May Be Exchanged
George T. Edmiston made the announcement after a local restaurant decided to withdraw its coupon from the program.
Remember, no service charge or booking fees at Downs. Our experienced service costs you nothing more.
Don't say we didn't warn you if you are left out.
The head of student Thrift book sales announced today that the invalid coupon in the Thrift books may be exchanged for two theater coupons at the Granada theater.
Mr. Edmiston denied reports that he had left town and abandoned the Thrift book sales.
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Mrs. Lois Odaffer Mr. Joe Brown
He said the Thrift books would go back on sale-off campus-as soon as possible.
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Dr. Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology currently on leave as lecturer at the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, has been elected a corresponding member of the Geological Society of Belgium.
He also has been chosen a foreign member of the Geological Society of London.
Plans for the coming formal initiation will be discussed at a meeting of the Arnold Air society at 7:15 p.m. today in the Military Science building.
The citation was made public through a letter received by Dr. John C. Frye, executive director of the State Geological survey, stating that this is "the highest honor accorded outsiders."
Dr. Moore Elected To Foreign Society
Dr. Moore is also an honorary member of German and Swiss societies of paleontology. He is presently editing a world reference work on invertebrate paleontology.
The society, which is open to all advanced Air Force ROTE cadets, expects to have initiation in two weeks. A film, "Football Highlights of 151," will be shown following the business meeting.
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1952
Initiation To Be Planned
Mountaineering Equipment Now On Display In Union
An exhibit of equipment used by the University Mountaineering club is now on display in the main corridor of the Union.
Boots, jackets, ropes, ice axes and other mountain climbing equipment is included in the display. There are several pictures of the club outings and of practice climbs on the side of mountains and campus buildings.
The club was organized in October, 1950 and now has 50 members. Its purpose of organization was to unite those interested in mountains, the sport of mountaineering and related activities.
Activities include practice climbing sessions on the campus and vacation outings to the mountains. Climbing trips have been to the Tetons in Wyoming, the Canadian Rockies and to Estes park in Colorado.
YOUR EYES
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Lawrence Optical Co.
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Ted Taylor, engineering senior, is president of the club.
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Kansas 'B' Team To Play Wildcats At Manhattan
Kansas' Jayhawker "B" team will try to pull number eight from a stubborn band of towering Kansas State freshmen at Manhattan Thursday night.
At the same time, the Jayhawk Juniors will try to avenge one of their two defeats of the season, suffered at the hands of State, 54-48, at Lawrence early this month. They lost to Olathe Naval Air Base earlier.
Roger Craft, hitting only one field goal but 10 of 14 charity tosses, led the Kansas State attack on the Jayhawkers with 12 points. Three KU players pulled in close behind, Everett Dye, Jerry Alberts, and Allen Kelley each scored 10 points.
Only two squads have been able to stop Coach Keith Lambert's Purple Kittens, Ft. Leonard Wood and the K-State Alumni turned the trick. The talented frosh are sporting a 6-2 won-lost record.
Kansas led by 11 midway in the second quarter, but a sharpshooting bunch of Cats chopped at the lead and went one point ahead near the end of the second quarter. Once out in front, they never trailed.
Kansas came within nine points with a few minutes left in the third period. In the fourth quarter a Jayhawk full-court press narrowed the gap to four points. But the KU aggressiveness got four of the Kansans fouled out and the upsurge fell short.
Jerry Armstrong Heads Group
Jerry Armstrong, engineering senior, was named chairman of the student Relays committee for the 1952 carnival here April 18 and 19, director Bill Easton announced Tuesday.
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1952
Armstrong has served on the committee for three years.
Other members of the committee are Bob Reed, Ben McCallister, Charles Keys, Hubert Dye and Bob Ball, college sophomores; George Breckenridge, engineering sophomore; Don Ellis and Jim Taylor, business juniors; Walter Cole, Jerry Brownlee, Bob Mehl, college juniors.
Seven freshmen will fill out the committee. Any male freshman may apply by turning his name in to Armstrong at the Kansas Relays office, Robinson Gym, before March 3.
Rifle Club Plans Match
A possible shoulder-to-shoulder match with the Women's Rifle club of the University of Missouri has
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By JACKIE JONES Daily Kansan Sports Editor
At the present time, the educational institutions throughout the nation are facing the question of de-emphasis of collegiate sports.
Recently eleven college presidents developed a code which they said would reduce the emphasis which we now place on athletics (particularly football). The executive committee of the American Council on Education immediately accepted this code.
This group is one of the most powerful in the educational field, and when it makes a decision it carries a great deal of weight.
This is all well and good if it is necessary, but are they actually justified?
It is apparent that a desire to de-emphasize sports has reached such a pitch that the highest controlling forces over the nation's colleges, have decided it is necessary for them to step in.
The eleven college presidents recommended that spring football practice be abolished. We had spring-practice long before any complaints of over-emphasis.
These same presidents would abolish bowl games. A large portion of the money received from bowl receipts goes back to the schools, and enables them to continue many academic programs.
Many of those who complain against college sports, say that the athletes spend too much time in pursuit of a varsity letter and not enough time toward those which accompany a degree. A recent survey made by the University, showed that there is very little difference between the grades made by an athlete and a non-athlete.
Some of the complaints state that the great importance placed upon a winning team causes colleges to offer athletic scholarships and at other times questionable inducements. Possibly this is true, but scholarships have put many students through school who would never have been able to attend.
John Q. Public, who has done the complaining, should stop and
The colleges have had sports programs for a long time, but no one complained of over-emphasis until Mr. Public began placing his dollars before the ticket window just to watch the college boys.
ask himself who is really doing the over-emphasizing, if there is such a thing.
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been announced by Jappy Rau, president of the KU Rifle club.
Miss Rau said that if the match can be arranged it will be held in April, but it will be necessary for ten women in the KU club to have a firing average of at least 90.
The Rifle club has voted a new constitution which requires that women desiring membership in the organization must fill out applications, and these applications will be voted upon by the club. Members will be required to maintain at least a C grade average.
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INTERPRETIVE DANCE SORORITY
Spring Dance Concert Tuesday, March 4th Fraser Theatre
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OPEN THURSDAYS 9:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M.
ALL OTHER WEEK-DAYS INCLUDING SAT. 9:00 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.
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Page 5
Bill Lienhard Replaces Bob Kenney In Lineup
Bill Lienhard, 6 foot 5 inch senior from Newton, will be back in the Jayhawker starting lineup at Norman against the Oklahoma Sooners Saturday.
Lienhard, just recovering from an influenza attack, will replace ailing Bob Kenney, Kansas' number two scorer. Kenney, first reported to have measles, was diagnosed as being hospitalized with a streptococcus throat. The Winfield senior became ill following Monday night's game with Missouri.
Kenney's loss to the Jayhawkers will hinder the KU scoring attack. It will be an especially severe blow with the Kansans going against Oklahoma.
The Sooners have consistently zoned the Jayhawks the last three years. Kenney's loss takes a good outside shooter out of the KU lineup. Kenney hit his 306th point Monday in the Kansas win over Missouri, 65-54.
The absence is further complicated by the fact that Lienhard has been on the sick list for two games and Larry Davenport, sharpshooting freshman, missed Tuesday's drill because of an attack of hives. Team physician Dr. Maurice Gross said Davenport's availability against
Oklahoma was doubtful.
Lienhard saw his first action in 14 days Monday against the Tigers, failing to score in a brief appearance. He went to the sidelines with the flu before the KU-Iowa State game at Ames, February 11.
He is averaging 7.5 points per game over the season's haul and has been especially effective against OU's zone in the teams' last four meetings.
Lienhard went all the way in practice as Coach Phog Allen split the workout defense against Oklahoma's closely-woven offense and offense against a zone defense.
John Keller, who took over Lienhard's spot when the latter was kayed by sickness, was at the other front-line spot in practice. Clyde Lovellette was at center, Bill Hougland and Dean Kelley at guard.
The snake-killing secretary bird uses its wings as a shield and a club at the same time. Often it will soar into the air, then drop its prey on the hard ground, ending the battle.
Basketball Scores
Western Michigan 70, Toledo 59
Albion 74, Michigan Normal 70
Hope 93, Calvin 67
Mich. Tech 78, Northern Mich. 53
Roanoke 68, Lynchburg 69
Moorhead 64, Shepherd (W.Va.) 79
St. Joseph (Brown) 69, John Carroll 62
Hamline 73, St. Olaf (Minn.) 52
Findlay 51, Bluffton 48
Kent State 62, Mount Urion 59
Flintburgh 64, Shepherd (W.Va.) 79
G. Washington 80, Washington & Lee 62
Baltimore U. 85, Wilson Tch. 57
Ohio U-81, Marietta 74
Duke 58, Davidson 50
Illinois 51, Slena 49
Canisius 65, LeMonte 62
Valley U. 50, Westminster (Mo.) 60
Central (Mo.) 75, Wm. Jewell (Mo.) 65
Abilene Christian (Texas) 64, Howard (Texas) 60, overtime
Texas Tech 78, Mississippi 58
St. Bonaventure 62, Nagla 51
Wayne (Neb.) 77, Midland (Neb.) 60
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1952
Tennis Team Needs Players
The University tennis team will hold a meeting for all prospective varsity players Monday, March 3.
Coach Dick Mechem announced
(Kas.) 56
(Kas.) 56
McPherson (Kas.) 50, Baker (Kas.) 49
Burlington (Iowa) J.C. 60, Wentworth (Mo.) JC 59
(Mo.) JC 59
Cincinnati 98, Western Reserve 52
Case Tech 119, Hiram 65
Eccohorn (Pa.) Tch. 56, Thell 55
Westminster 78, Waynesburg 77
Slippery Rock (Pa.) Teh 74, Allegheny
57
Kansas Wesleyan 75, Bethany (Kas.) 73
Miss. Col. 66, Howard (Ala.) 58
Miss. Col. 66, Howard (Ala.) 58
that any male student who is interested in joining the team should attend the meeting at the concrete courts south of the stadium.
The team will include several returning lettermen, but others are needed to fill vacancies. Some of the players from last year includes Charles Crawford, 1951 Big Seven doubles champion; Albert Hedstern, college sophomore and John Frei-burger, business seniors.
Gene Fotopoulos, transfer student from Hutchinson, is also expected to add depth to the team.
DeVinney Ranked Among World's Leading Hurdlers
HOW MANY TIMES A DAY DO YOU
BY BOB LONGSTAFF
Bob DeVinney one of the world's leading hurdlers, will be nearing the end of his running career when he participates in the Big Seven indoor track meet Saturday.
He was ranked third in the world and second in the United States in the 400 meter hurdles by Track and Field magazine. Charles Moore, Cornell university, and a Russian doing his running behind the Iron Curtain were the only persons ranked above him.
The first time he ran the 400 meter race was in June 1950 at the Junior AAU meet in Washington, D.C. He took first place with a time of 53 seconds.
The world's record for the 400 meter race is 50.6 seconds. Last year, in the NAAU meet in Berkeley, Calif, DeVinney took second place in 51.8 seconds.
"In the 400 meter hurdles, you have to sprint all the time, so you need the speed of a sprinter and the endurance of a distance man. Coach Bill Easton is one of if not
After this season is completed, DeVinney plans to run in the Olympic tryouts in June at Los Angeles. If he places in the tryouts and competes in the Olympics, he then intends to hang up his spikes.
Phone 307
the greatest endurance builders in the track game," DeVinney said.
DeVinney's running was first noticed by Carl Bonge, Anderson High school coach, Anderson, Ind. He was in the sixth grade at that time. With Bonge's training DeVinny won the state championship in both the low and high hurdles and anchored the half-mile relay.
His stride was long in high school, and he had to learn how to alternate legs in going over the hurdles. The hurdles are 18 yards apart with the normal number of strides being seven.
After he was graduated from high school, he enlisted in the Navy and served aboard the USS Missouri for two years. To keep in shape, DeVinney would run around the 16-inch gun turrets.
DeVinney believes much of his success belongs to his coaches, "Everything I've ever done in a pair of spikes I can accredit to Bonge and Easton," he said. "I've fallen down a couple of times, and that I wouldn't want to accredit to them."
In the academic field, he is the only male secretarial major at the University. This is a wide open field, he said.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1952
Heaven And Hell' Party Is Annual Event At Watkins Hall
Barbara Garberich, college sophomore, was chosen as the devil, and Ann Penix, fine arts sophomore, as the angel of Watkin's hall annual "Heaven and Hell" party Feb. 23.
Rosemary Scheuermart, education junior, was Gabriel, recording all newcomers at the pearly gates.
Decorations of silver stars and white clouds under blue lighting provided the celestial atmosphere. Downstairs, a huge ten-foot devil's mask and hands hung on the wall. An inferno of flames shelted up from the fireplace the bats on the roof. Red-checkered tablecloths and whiskey bottle candle-holders under red light created the underworld scene.
The chaperones wore Mrs. Lester
fester, Mrs. Leone Wenzel and Mrs.
Louis Stanley.
The guests were Charles Dick, Hugh Eberle, Charles Schroff, David Thurston, Dave Webber, Robert Davis, Paul Thomas, Ronald Roth, James George, Charlene Dreiling, Donovan Hull, Robert Pace, John Geyer, Herbert Hill, William Slamin
Psychology club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 9 Strong.
Official Bulletin
day. J. Strong.
Jewish service, Hillel Foundation,
3:45 p.m. Friday, Danforth chapel.
All welcome.
All welcome.
Faculty Forum meeting, Monday
noon, Faculty club. "Are Our Moral
and Ethical Standards Changing?"
Alpha Kappa Psi field trip to L.B.M. in Kansas City, Thursday, meet in Union 12:30.
Math club, 5 p.m. Thursday, 203
strong. Mathematical recreations.
AWS Senate meeting, 4:30 p.m.
Thursday, the Lounge. New and old members be present.
Delta Sigma Pi vs. Alpha Kappa Psi basketball game, 7:30 tonight Robinson gym.
Jay Janes, 5 today, Pine room Wear uniforms for pleading.
Sachem meeting Thursday postpond until 9 p.m. Wednesday, March 5 228 Strong.
Journalism students and others interested, off-the-record talk and discussion with Albert Ravenholt, far eastern affairs, 7 to-night. AWS lounge.
HAJAS meeting, 1915 tonight, 105 military Science bldg. Interesting film to be shown.
El atenuo se reunira el miercoles,
27 de felirero a las 7:30 in 113
strong, musica, bailes, y conversa-
ción.
Phi Mu Alpha, 7 tonight, 131
Strong, pledges must attend.
Openings for editor and business manager for K-Book, K-Calendar and Student Directory, written applications to be submitted to Bill Stinson, Dean of Men's office, deadline March 1. For details contact Bill Stinson.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 206 Strong. All welcome.
Arnold Air Society, new starting time, 7:15 tonight, all advanced FROTC cadets wishing to join attend.
I. V. C. F. missionary meeting, 12 noon-12:50 Friday, Danforth chapel. Chess club, 7:15 tonight, 111 strong.
Stateswomen - 6-7:15 tonight,
Hawk's Nest.
Special ASC meeting, 8 p.m.
Thursday, 110 Fraser.
Mathematical Colloquium, 5 today,
233 Strong. Dr. Marc Krasner.
Three new German films in sound
Savarian Alps, Lake Constance,
Muensterland) will be shown 4 to
5 p.m. Thursday, 15 Fraser.
No charge
Tryouts for "College Daze" to night and Thursday, 7-10 p.m., Military Science bldg.
AD Pi - DG Exchange Dinner
AD Pi - DG Exchange Dinner
Alpha Delta Pi sorority and Delta
Gamma sorority held an exchange
dinner Tuesday. The chaperones
ere Mrs. Thomas A. Clark and Mrs.
W. S. Shaw.
Travel Service
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and Richard Gruendel.
Blaine Hardesty, John Hamilton,
Cloye Wiley, Kenneth Moore, Lee
Lowder, Dean Moh'strom, Richard
Cummings, Marvin Murphy, Joseph
Kosar, Glen Beauchamp, William
Wentworth, Donald Kerle, Leonard
Starr and Jack Richards.
Charlene and Jack Smades, Jack Jevons, Edward House, Wesley Peters, Charles Jones, Donna and David Brandt, James Glass, Marvin Meishaur, Robert Dairs, Loretta Cooley, Harold Rinier, Gordon Irwin Gaston and Barbara and Bud Khim.
Mr. and Mrs. Carleton Hart Armsby, Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Carolyn Hart, to John Wesley King, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Clyde King, Wichita.
Carolyn Armsby To Wed John King
Miss Armsby, special student, is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. She is the present sweetheart of Sigma Chi.
ar, King, business senior, is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity and Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity.
Fifteen men were initiated into Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, Feb. 22, at a dinner honoring Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor.
Sigma Delta Chi Initiates 15 Men
The initiates were Charles Burch, John Herrington, Robert Longstaff, Donald Moser, Philip Newman, Robert Nold, Maurice Prather, Max Thompson, Roger Yarrington, journalism juniors; Ronald Kull, Robert Stewart, college juniors; Gerald Renner, journalism senior, and Marion Klewer, James Powers, Joseph Taylor, graduates.
Koppa Phi Elects Officers;
Gertha Harper Is President
Gertha Harper, college junior, recently was elected president of Kappa Phi, Methodist women's organization.
Other officers are Linda Stormont, vice-president; Donna Davis, recording secretary; Virginia Isaacson, corresponding secretary, and Georgia Stiles, treasurer.
Phi Lambda Theta Rush Tea
Phi Lambda Theta, women's national education honor fraternity, will give their annual spring rush tea from 7:30 to 8:30 pm. Thursday in the AWS lounge.
UNION CAB PHONE
COEDS!
15
It's smart and thrifty to launder your cotton blouses at Risk's It's easy too.
Risk's self service Laundry
The Department of Speech and Drama
Presents
A Romantic Comedy by Christopher Fry
FRASER THEATER
The Lady's Not For Burning
TONIGHT, THURS., FRI., SAT.
Feb. 27, 28, 29, March 1
I-D CARDS ADMIT
Present I-D Card for Reserved Seat TICKET OFFICE - GREEN HALL
Open Daily 9-12 a.m. — 1-4 p.m.
Lindley's Kansas Cleaners WHERE QUALITY IS FIRST
Ladies' Plain Dresses
89c
Men's Suits EACH
You Can Have the Best at a Low Cost
Economical — Cash and Carry — 12 E. 8th
No 'Cents' In Waiting—Let KANSAN Classifieds Save You Money.
Harzfelds
inseparable separates!
cotton co-ordinates
A.
A. Back Interest shirt. Black, green.
B. Broadcloth skirt; unpressed pleats.
Black, navy, brown, red, green, 5.95
navy, brown, red with white, 5.00
C. Sleeveless checks. Black, red
All 10 to 16.
navy, brown with white, 5.00
A
Comfort! Convenience!
JAYHAWKER
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THE GREAT APACHE REBELLION...
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Flimed from U. S. Army
archives in SPECTACULAR
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COLUMBIA
PICTURES presents
INDIAN UPRISING
staring
GEORGE MONTCOMERY
An EDWARD SMALL production
GEORGE MONTGOMERY with Audrey Long - Carl Benton Reid - Eugenio Iglesias
---
Late News Sports "Ski In Sky"
1.
1495724 0811 3739 4 7 30 47 47
Page
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Classified Advertising
Phone K.U.376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will promptly. Ads must be called in during the business hours (except Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business office, Journey Center, 3455 P.M. 3:45 p.m. the day before publication data.
One day
...50c
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Three Five
days days
75c $1.00
2c 3c
25 words or less Additional words
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamedish and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange travel whether tours or individual funerities. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, ski coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
passage now for European travel this
summer. Call Miss Gleesman at
First National Bank for information and
reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30-
FOR RENT
ROOMS FOR BOYS, *one single room,
one double,
1414 Term. 1906 Word. 327
W. F. Crawford
OREAD BARBER SHOP for expert barber service on the Hill. 8,00 to 5,300 Laundry and Dry Cleaning Charles Coffman and Bernard Borsat. 1273 Eadron. 27
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPING: Experienced in reports term papers, theses, notes and stencil cutting. Prompt attention given. Phone 1952W. Mrs. Robert Lewis, 1915 Tenn.
TYPIST: References; prompt, accurate service and late model Royal type-writer. Convenient to KU Bring to 1723 Indiana or call Mrs. Blesner. 3011R. tfr
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or call to 917 Rhode
Island. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biologi- reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Raccoon, 838 La. Ap. 4, upstairs. Ph. 2757.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6
am. until midnight.
STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tt
All Type Pens and Pencils Repaired QUICK SERVICE
N
STUDENT
Union Book Store
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip- hip, we have the assuring fast efficient service. Bowman and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
CRYSTAL CASTA serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made ples and desserts. Customized air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Crystal Cake, 699 Vt.
AJYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleas-
pet shop. We have everything in the pet
BLUE PLASTIC bilfoil containing identification, driver's license, and $16.00. It is on the money, but return the papers. Patty Edwards, 420 West 1st Phone 860. 26
held. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything - for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf
WANTED
LOST
WANTED: Typing to do at home. Please
phone 7543123 S. Lawrence
kansas, or phone 7543123
THRIFT BOOK HOLDERS! We have received a new supply of Jayhawk ash trays. Stop in and get yours free. Rowlands Book Store. 29
EXPERIENCED fur restlayer and repair.
EXPERIMENTAL alterations. Pho-
1116W, 945 Alabama
1116W, 945 Alabama
MISCELLANEOUS
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
ers buyers. William J. V. W.
Almen, 31108.
WANTED: CLERK-TYPIST by reliable Lawrence firm. Vacation and overtime pay. State schooling and experience. Write P.O. Box 412, Lawrence, Kans. 4
HELP WANTED
CARGILL, INC., specialists in serving agriculture--Mr. John Savage will be on the view seniors interested in a training program in this organization. Interested persons should come to the Business Management Bureau 21, Strong, to sign the interview schedule.
FOR SALE
HANDS-FREE when writing or typing.
A BOOK-EASEM marks any reference section such as vocabulary. etc. See them at the Student Union Book Store. *?*
WRITER'S CRAMP? Rent a typewriter and type those notes, themes and compositions. Only $3.50 per month or $1.00 per day at your Student Union Book Store.
SPECIAL RATES for students on Time, Life, and Fortune magazines. We take
History DepartmentAcquires $8,000 Literature Collection
A collection of 6,300 pamphlets and tracts published more than 150 years ago and valued at over $8,000 has been acquired by the history department.
All of the literature in the collection was put out in the period 1787 to 1800 and covers many aspects of the French revolution.
The acquisition, the largest in its field purchased by the University, adds a mark of further distinction to the collection started by the late Dr. Frank E. Melvin, professor of history.
"The acquisition provides the University with one of the really good history libraries of primary source material in the United States," Ambrose Saricks, assistant department history, said. "The department hopes to make efforts to continue to build up the collection." he added.
By SHIRLEY LYON
The collection was purchased from Martinus Nijhoff, a bookseller from the Hague, Netherlands, with extra library funds allotted to the department.
The pamphlets and tracts, or treatises, arrived on the campus in December for approval and the department decided to purchase them in January upon the recommendation of Dr. Saricks.
The collection will be kept in Watson library. A check list is now being established but as yet, there have been no plans to catalogue each item.
The collection provides excellent material for persons doing research in this particular phase of history. It includes material on the quarries with the parlaments, religious matters, financial developments, the
"The pamphlets are in excellent condition," Dr. Saricks said. "The paper used in that period was much more durable than the paper used today."
subscriptions to all magazines. P.S. You're a rebate too. Student Union Book Store.
LEARN LANGUAGE the easy way.
French, German, and Spanish verb
wheels solve all your difficulties. Student
Union Book Store. 3
VIS-ED vocabulary cards in French German, and Spanish will help you to an "A." See them today at your Student Union Book Store. 3
SNEAK PREVIEW
social of King Louis XVI, and matters of administration of the time.
TONIGHT AT 8:32 ONLY
An Extra Surprise
MAJOR STUDIO
SNEAK PREVIEW
IMPORTANT
An Advance Showing of a Major
Studio Picture That Will Be Here Soon!
PLUS BEFORE FEATURE BEFORE AND AFTER PREVIEW
Exam Centers Set For Summerfields
3
The producers request the title be withheld. However we can tell you this much . . . It'll be one of these 1952 hits!
- "FIVE FINGERS"
- "THE WILD NORTH"
Six testing centers where Kansas high school senior boys will take the preliminary examination March 10 in the competition for Summerfield scholarships at the University were announced today by James K. Hitt, chairman of the committee.
- "LONE STAR"
- "RED SKIES OF MONTANA"
- "MA & PA KETTLE AT THE FAIR"
"THE BELLE OF NEW YORK"
- "QUO VADIS"
Hitt said he expects approximately 300 nominations from high school principals for the preliminaries. The principals be competing for scholarships that will case each be sufficient to assure the winner a four-year course at KU.
- "I WANT YOU"
ALL PERFORMANCES OF
LAST TIMES TODAY-
The preliminary tests will be given in: Chanute, Dodge City, Lawrence (Military science building at KE), Salina, Wakeeney, and Wichita.
Man
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Features - "Bayonets" 7:00 - 10:29 Sneak 8:32 Only
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Buddy
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TYRONE ANN
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never
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STAR'S
THURSDAY
A Great New
Romantic Team!
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AN EXCITING
LOVE STORY
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20
COLOR BY
TECHNICOLOR
DENNIE - DENNIS PRICE
Also Color Cartoon-News
Soon . . . Watch For "The Belle of New York"
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
TONITE - THURSDAY
Box-Office Open 6:45
ENDS TONITE
"FIXED BAYONETS"
Unusual - Daring Pictures!
For Adult Moviegoers
ARCH OBOLER'S Suspense Drama
Of a Modern Adam And Eve!
"FIVE"
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IF - - - YOU LIKE (and
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Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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She's got all RENO in an UPROAR...
BECAUSE SHE WANTS to DIVORCE HER MOM and DAD!
MARK STEVENS
PEGGY DOW
Reunion in Reno
GIGI PERREAU
Join us on the radio tonight at 10 p.m. at The Comedy Central Studios
FRANCES DEE
RAY COLLINS LEE ERICKSON
- EXTRA ADDED *
TOMMY DORSEY & ORCH.
Color Cartoon * News
Evening Features At
7:38 - 9:36 p.m.
STARTING FRIDAY
A Game More Deadly Than Sin and They Gave It a New Twist!
JANE VICTOR RUSSELL • MATURE
LAS VEGAS STORY
B.I.B.
VOL. 1
with VINCENT PRICE • HOAGY CARMICHAEL
NEW PATEE
PHONE 321
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1952
Student Court Has 14 Actions
Fourteen actions were taken by Student Court Tuesday night.
In a close 4 to 2 decision, the Court freed Carolyn Husted, college freshman, from charges of parking in the wrong zone. Although the case was tried in Carolyn's name, actually her sister Barbara, a non-student, had been driving the car when the ticket was given. The judges felt that "because of the involvement of a non-student, and certain other mitigating circumstances," the defendant should not be given any penalty.
Bob Rupp, engineering freshman, was found guilty of wrong parking and leaving his car overnight. Roth Catewood, college freshman, was declared not guilty of a charge of no permit.
The Court found William H. Pringle, second year law, not guilty of over-parking, and ruled the same for Irwin D. Brown, second year law.
Default was declared in the cases of Don Pringle, college junior; Ken Hoffman, college senior; Haroldeen Murray, fine arts sophomore, and Melvine B. Evans, graduate student.
A case involving Mrs. Virginia Cook, 842 Illinois street, was referred to the parking committee. Richard Burnett, college freshman, was cleared of charges of parking in the wrong zone.
Continuances were rendered in the cases of K. Davis, J. M. Stull, Y. Mo, and M. Stul. The appeal of Andrew V. Davis, education senior, was withdrawn.
Midshipmen To Hold Ring Dance
Following traditions set by the United States Naval Academy, midshipman at KU will hold their annual Ring dance from 9 p.m. to midnight April 4 in the Military science building.
the dance, sponsored by the Hawkwatch society for midshipmen, will feature the band of Bob Ausherman, also a midshipman expecting to be commissioned this spring.
The dance is held in honor of the junior and senior midshipmen receiving their class rings. A huge replica of the ring is one of the props used in the observance of the standard traditions.
The midshipman receives his ring and dips it in "water from the seven seas". Then he continues through the giant ring, and while in the ring, tradition has it that he should receive a kiss from his bride.
©h. Say Did You See
workers on the Daily Kansan had a false alarm yesterday morning when the flag in front of Strong hall was flying at half mast. They heard rumors to the effect that a faculty member had passed away.
When they investigated, they learned that a workman had accidently left the flag flying in this place because it wouldn't go any higher.
Tom Yoe, director of public relations said the flag was changed.
Accident Victim Still Unconscious
Madison Murray, college sophomore, was reported still unconscious this afternoon at Lawrence Memorial hospital as a result of injuries received in a two-car collision Saturday night on highway 24-40 near Tonganoxie.
Ann Perry, of Kansas City, Mo. Murray's companion in the car, was reported as conscious and slightly better.
Charges of drunken driving and passing without sufficient clearance have been issued in Leavenworth county against Bruin Grays, driver of the car which collided with Murray's. Gray, who is from Leavenworth, suffered minor injuries.
Survey Seeks Trappers' Names
The State Biological Survey at the University is anxious to obtain the names of the leading trappers in Kansas.
A fur project, which was initiated at the University last year, is investigating every phase of trapping in the state.
The biologists leading the project are interested in establishing contacts with the hunters and trappers who have been most successful in capturing fur animals.
They believe these trappers can do much to aid in the understanding of the animals and in producing a maximum crop of fur each year.
Ten per cent of the trappers were contacted at the beginning of the trapping season and from the returns thus far received, the highest number of animals reported caught by a single trapper has been: muskrat, 101; raccoon, 126; opossum, 73; striped skunk, 70; coyote, 54; mink, 27; beaver, 8; badger, 2; spotted skunk, 16. and weasel, 1.
Howard Stains, graduate student,
is interested in contacting any person
who has made a better catch of
any of these animals or who has
caused animals not listed, or who
knows of someone who did.
Pep Club Set For Conclave
The annual Big Seven Pep conclave will be held Saturday in the Kansas City Municipal auditorium in conjunction with the Big Seven indoor track meet.
Each pep club will send five voting delegates to the conclave, Dean Cole, college senior, Don Hortor, college junior, Thomas Oliver, education senior, Kenneth Groggs, education junior and Joe Lastelic, journalism senior were elected at a meeting Feb. 21 to represent the KuKu club.
The purpose of the conclave is to discuss methods of promoting good sportsmanship and closer co-ordination among the pep clubs. Each club will give a report on its functions and exchange ideas beneficial to the other clubs.
The KuKu and Jay Jane clubs expect to send about six cars of students to the meeting.
"Students with constructive ideas concerning the pep clubs are urged to contact the delegates of the Jay Janes and KuKu's." Don Horttor, president of the KuKu club, said.
Thirteen sophomore men from 13 organized houses acted as judges to select a sophomore queen for the coming Tony Pastor dance at a recent meeting of representatives of the sophomore class.
13 Men Judge Queen Candidates
The men weren't final judges, but were called upon to narrow the field of 14 entries received for the contest to four which will be sent to Tony Pastor for final judging. Pastor's selection will become sophomore candidate for the queen.
--the battleship USS Iowa displaces enough water to flood 46 acres of land one foot deep.
Representatives decided to cancel plans for a sophomore dance in order to support the Pastor all-student dance, Saturday, March 8.
If You Can Get Through College, You Can Pass At Newport, Navy Says
KU men who attend Naval officer candidate school at Newport, R.I. have been assured that the school presents no obstacles beyond the ability of today's college graduates.
A firm grasp of the fundamentals of mathematics is helpful at the Newport school, according to a bulletin from the Navy, but an easy familiarity with higher mathematics
Miss Esther Twente To Tell
Retail Sales Institute Courses Popular With Kansas Citizens
Miss Esther Twente, chairman of the department of social work, will speak at the Speech Therapy seminar at 4 p.m. Thursday in the speech clinic annex.
Miss Twente will speak about the relationship of the work in her department to work in speech correction.
By May more than 4,100 persons will have attended the Retail Sales institutes conducted this year by the University, Dean Frank T. Stockton of University Extension, said today.
The sales institute was described by Dean Stockton as one of the most popular off-campus adult education programs. It is usually presented in intensive early morning-evening sessions in two days. This makes for a minimum interruption of duties of the sales personnel of the retail stores of a community.
Three programs are now offered. The first school for a community is Salesmanship for Employers and
Indicative of the solid reception of the institutes by the cities holding them is that by May 20 Kansas cities will have completed three or more Retail Sales institutes. Those who will have had two institutes will number 38. Thirty-one others will have had one school.
Employees." The second program is "Techniques of Selling" and the third-year course is "Salesmanship Today."
"It itakes a long time for a new service to cover and satisfy the state of Kansas." Dean Stockton added. "Despite the impressive record made by the institute, there remain in the state 27 cities of 2,000 or more population where no institute has been held."
Two courses of instruction are offered. One is for graduates with higher training in electronics, economics, architecture and the various engineering fields. This includes two months of basic training, and two more months at a specialist school.
is far from necessary. Only recently the Navy abandoned a policy requiring high school or college trigonometry courses of all applicants.
The majority of officer candidates train four months for their commissions in basic sea-going skills: navigation, seamanship, gunnery, communications, marine engineering and damage control.
The average attendance this year at the institutes will be about 130.
Fred Sharpe is the extension lecturer who gives most of the instruction.
College students may apply for the Officer Candidate school anytime within six months prior to graduation. Applications may be made to any Navy recruiting station or office of Naval Officer Procurement.
KFKU To Feature Musical Program
A special musical program for students will be presented on the Concert KFU broadcast at 7 p.m. today over KFKU.
Caruso will sing two numbers,
"Westi La Giubba" from "Tpagliacci"
(Leoncavallo), and "M'appari" from
"Martha" (Flotow), Albanese
willSing "Un Bel Di" from "Madame
Butterfly" (Puccini), and Jascha
Heifetz will play a violin arrangement
of "Estrellita" (Ponce).
The First Piano Quartet will play "Malaguena" (Leucaona), and the Robert Shaw Chorale will sing the March and Chorus from "Carmen" (Bizet). The Hollywood Bowl symphony orchestra will play the "Ritual Fire Dance" (DeFalla).
News Roundup Propose Change In House Radio,TV Coverage Rules
Concert Hall is a regular Wednesday night feature. It is written and produced by Wilson O'Connell, graduate student with Lynn Ossborn, college senior, announcing and explaining the program.
Washington—(U.P.)—Rep. Patrick J. Hillings (R.-Calif), proposed today that House rules be amended to permit radio, television, and newsreel coverage of House committee hearings.
Hillings' amendment would cancel a radio-TV-renewsel ban imposed by Speaker Sam Rayburn.
“To prevent any abuse” that might arise, Hillings proposed that the committees themselves be authorized to decide by majority vote whether to let their sessions be broadcast, televised, or filmed.
Rep. Jacob K. Javits (R.-N.Y.) predicted that House Republicans will make a united party fight to overturn Rayburn's ruling.
He said they may be able to pick enough Democratic support to force the issue to a showdown vote on the House floor.
The executive committee of the radio correspondents' galleries at the capitol wrote Rayburn that his ruling was "discrimination against two of the major media for news dissemination"—radio and television. The group asked for a chance to discuss the question with the Speaker "in the quiet of your office."
Queen Elizabeth II Honors War Hero
London—(U.P.)—Queen Elizabeth II, in the first semi-public state function since the death of her father, pinned the Victoria Cross today on the breast of a nervous Korean war hero.
The young sovereign, dressed in a simply-cut black dress as a mark of her mourning, also dubbed 55 new knights of her realm with the tap of a gleaming sword on their shoulders.
The ceremony was held in the gold-and-white state ballroom of Buckingham palace.
Six-foot six-inch Pvt. William Speakman, 19, son of a cleaning woman, was summoned before the queen.
The Earl of Carlendon, the Lord Chamberlain, read the citation for the Victoria Cross. Britain's highest award for extraordinary heroism.
Canadian Mounties Kill Infected Animals
Regina, Sask.—(U.P.) - Canada's fight to eradicate an epidemic of dreaded foot and mouth disease hit full stride today as Royal Mounted police armed with rifles and pistols slaughtered infected animals.
Bulldozers, hampered by a five-foot layer of frost-hardened earth, began gouging out a mass grave for the first herd of cattle slaughtered.
The United States banned all imports of live cattle and fresh beef from Canada Monday after Canadian officials in Ottawa announced the outbreak of the disease in the Saskatchewan province.
Lawmakers Demand Government Action
Washington—(U.P.)-Texas lawmakers demanded today that the State department negotiate immediately an "improved" agreement with Mexico to provide the Southwest with laborers needed for seasonal farm work.
The house Tuesday passed and returned to the Senate legislation aimed at stemming the illegal flow of Mexican "wetbacks" across the border in search of jobs in this country.
The measure would impose stiff penalties for concealing or harboring illegal aliens and would allow Immigration Service patrols to search without warrants within 25 miles of the border.
Three German Films To Be Shown Today
Three films, sponsored by the department of German, "Muensterland," "Sonniger Bodensee," and "Bayerische Alpen" will be shown at 4 p.m. today in the projection room of Fraser hall. They will be shown again at 5 p.m. Thursday in the same room.
The films have German sound tracks and are highly recommended by the departmental film committee to students enrolled in German language courses.
Acheson Returns From NATO Meeting
Washington — (U,P)— Secretary or State Dean Acheson returned from the North Atlantic treaty meetings today and received warm congratulations from President Truman on "a most successful conference."
Mr. Truman congratulated both Acheson and Secretary of Treasury John W. Snyder at National airport when they arrived from Lisbon, Portugal.
The President told the cabinet officers the meetings in London and Lisbon accomplished the "things we have been working for these last three or four years."
Living Costs To Rise Price Experts Warn
Washington — (U.P.)—Government price experts warned today that the cost of living will start going up again after leveling off for the first time since last summer.
A high official predicted flatly that prices will be higher a year from now, as the result of heavier government defense spending and other inflationary pressures.
At the same time, the bureau of labor statistics said that "seasonal" factors were largely responsible for the fact that Jan. 15 showed no rise from the previous month.
Post-Christmas "white sales" and other January clearances dropped clothing and house furnishing prices on the index far enough to offset increases in the cost of food, rent and other items, experts explained.
Ching Says CIO May Delay Strike
The walkout is scheduled for midnight Sunday. Ching said Union President O. A. Knight told him "a reply to this request will be made at the earliest possible moment."
Washington — (U.R.)— Federal Mediation Chief Cyrus S. Ching said today the CIO oil workers have agreed to consider his request for a one-week postponement of a nation-wide oil refinery strike.
Knight told Ching the Union will continue negotiations "as long as there is a possibility of settlement without the necessity of strike action and subsequent hardship to the general public and harm to the defense effort."
The CIO union and several AFL and independent unions are demanding a 25-cent hourly wage boost. Several companies have offered 10 cents, but have been turned down by the unions.
El Paso, Tex.—(U.P.)C. M. Henderson, mayor of Farwell, Tex., where he was named 1951 Man of the Year, said today he would waive extradition to Kansas to face criminal charges.
Henderson To Waive Kansas Extradition
Henderson is accused of obtaining a $45,000 bank loan fraudulently from a Garden City bank and of having a $1,056,110 shortage of government grain stored in his warehouses.
Henderson said he decided to cut short a trip to Opal, Mexico, on a mining project, when he heard the Kansas bureau of investigation had issued a warrant for his arrest.
Search Continues For Missing Airmen
Agana, Guam — (U.J.P)— Military ships and planes scoured an area 150 miles northwest of Guam today in a search for six men missing in the explosion of a B-29 flying weather laboratory.
Four of the 10 men aboard the plane were rescued from the ocean by the Navy ship USS Tom Bigbee.
The survivors were uninjured. They had spent the night clinging to liferafts. The fate of the other six men aboard the plane was not known.
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English Comedy Provides Top Entertainment
Bv BOB NOLD
Drollery and skepticism were well mixed Wednesday night to provide top entertainment at the season's third major play, the English comedy, "The Lady's Not For Burning" Bob Allen, KLWN announcer, handled the difficult role of Thomas Mendin with understanding.
Mendip has an exaggerated view of man's cynicism toward the world. Until he meets Jennet, a woman condemned to be burned for witchcraft, he is positive that no good exists in the world. She refutes this belief.
The surface plot appears to be a contrast between Jennet's desire to live and Mendip's desire to die. But the witty, satirical wording of the play turned Mendip's plea for death into a mockery of unacquaintance with the world.
A humorous mood prevailed throughout the play. James Clausesen, college junior, as Nicholas Devize, and Allen Crafton, as Matthew Skipps, topped the list of mirth-makers.
George Herman, instructor in English, as Mayor Hebbie Tyson, had a combination serious, comical part. He will probably be remembered longest as the man who insisted that "this will all be taken care of at the proper time."
Mary Lou Jukes, graduate student, was an enchanting witch. She effectively put across her desire to live.
Another crowd pleaser was Sam Sebesta, education junior, who played a simple, drowsy chaplain.
Jay Janes Pledge Nine Candidates
The play will continue through Saturday, March 1.
Nine women have been pledged to Jay Janes, woman's pep organization.
They are Elinor Loffelmann, special student; Georgette Figueredo, special graduate student; Luella Schmalzried, college sophomore; Esther Brown, pharmacy sophomore; Nan Mosby, fine arts sophomore; Kay Lambert, college sophomore; Kay Lambert, college sophomore; Margaret Black, college sophomore; and MaryAnn Mahoney, education sophomore.
Helen Maduros, Jay James' president, announced that an initiation banquet will be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday, March 5, at the Eldridge hotel. The initiation service will follow the banquet.
Students To Give Blood Donations To Red Cross; Scheduled For May
A three-day campus drive for blood donations when the Red Cross bloodmobile visits Lawrence in May was approved by an All Student Council committee Wednesday.
The drive is set for May 14, 15, and 16.
Heywood Davis, committee chairman, met with Miss Lorraine Jacquemin, representative of the Defense Blood center in Kansas City, and Mrs. Stanley Hipp, executive secretary of the Douglas county Red Cross chapter Tuesday. His committee informed the Red Cross that the students will request the bloodmobile to visit KU.
"It is our aim to engage many earnest and willing student volunteers to see that a successful drive is carried on," Davis added.
"Our committee enthusiastically welcomes the opportunity to work in co-operation with the Douglas county Red Cross chapter in conducting this drive," he said.
The blood drive was proposed by a group of students, who, having seen the response given
The requirement that persons under 21 years furnish written parental consent does not mean that donating blood is a hazardous process. It is only a formality in accordance with state law, Loy Kirkpatrick, a member of the committee, explained.
similar campaigns on other campuses, felt that a drive should be held at KU.
The drive, scheduled for only three days, will be on a more limited scale than such drives at other colleges and universities. The bloodmobile will be available in Lawrence for that time only, and 150 donations is the maximum that can be processed each day.
The committee hopes there will be less of the usual promotion "stunts," and more personal contacts in organized houses by representatives who will be sincerely and enthusiastically behind the drive, Kirkpatrick said.
.
The Interdenominational Youth council is cooperating in the World Day of Prayer services. Miss Lois Edwards, Lawrence, will lead the response reading during the service Friday evening.
49th Year, No. 99
Daily Kansan
Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of the humanities, will deliver a series of six lectures entitled "The East-West Conflict: An Asian Viewpoint," at the University beginning March 6.
Dr. Chakravarty To Give Talks
The lectures are as follows: March 6, "Colonialism, Nationalism and Communism in Asia"; March 13, "Pre-Industrial Civilizations in Asia"; March 20, "India and Fakistani Economic Challenge"; March 27, "The Rise of American Power in Asia"; April 3, "Korea and Its Lesson for East West"; and April 10, "Western Democracies vs. U.S.S.R."
Former adviser of the Indian delegation to the United Nations, Dr. Chakravarty conducted a semester-long lecture series here last fall. The forthcoming lectures will be non-credit and open to the public.
The committee will meet again next week to make further plans and investigate the problems involved in the drive.
The Thursday lectures will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the basement lecture room, Spooner hall.
KU Chorale To Participate In Special Church Service Friday
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
The KU Chorale, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, instructor of music education, will sing in the annual World Day of Prayer service at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the First Methodist church.
The music will be a special feature of the service and include prayer responses, solos, and numbers by the choir. During the service the choir will lead the congregation in the singing of the hymns. The service this year will be held$^{2}$
The Interdenominational Youth
The service this year will be held at night for the first time in order that it may be a community wide project.
A group from the KU Westminster fellowship will present a dramatic interpretation, "Mother Liberty's Children," at 11:15 a.m. Friday over station KLWN. The group already has presented this interpretation in which group members plains the projects supported by the World Day of Praver offerings.
Students participating in the program are John Barber, Patricia Munson, Jean Ann Scupin, college sophomores; John Maier, college senior; Sue Moyer, college freshman; Curtis Glover and Minoru Kamada, graduate students, and Robert Allen.
Madison Murray, college sophomore who was seriously injured in an automobile accident Sunday has been moved to Watkins hospital.
Hospital attendants reported today that his condition is "about the same" as yesterday. He has been unconscious since the accident.
Unconscious Student Moved To Watkins
fellowship of Haskell Institute also will join in the city-wide service. The Haskell students will hold a short service following the breakfast Friday, and participate in a short drama Friday evening at the First Methodist church.
--once at the start of the race and again at the finish.
Work with the American Indians is one of the six projects for which an offering will be taken.
Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952
JOSEPH FUCHS
Pilings Finished For Fieldhouse
The Raymond Concrete Piling company of Kansas City, Mo. moved from the site of the new University fieldhouse Wednesday after setting 875 piles in three months.
The Bennett Construction company of Topeka, general contractor for the job, is cleaning up the site to pour concrete caps over the pilings. Work on the fieldhouse will halt in May unless the National Production authority releases more structural steel to complete the job.
Reports from Washington, D. C., indicate the steel will be released soon. No official notice has been given to that effect.
Memorial Fund To Honor Newell
A trust fund is being established as a memorial to Charles Br Newell, former business manager of the University Medical center who died Feb. 15.
Trustees of the fund are Bruce W. Dickson Jr., president of the Kansas Hospital association; Blake A. Williamson, vice-chairman of the Kansas social welfare board, and Dr. Lee Leger, physician.
The memorial was a spontaneous suggestion when news of Newell's death reached the Medical center and his friends throughout the state.
Violinist To Play Recital Monday
Joseph Fuchs, leading violinist,
will appear in Hoch auditorium at
8:20 p.m. Monday, March 3, on the
University Concert course.
Students will be admitted by ID cards.
Single admission tickets are available at the fine arts office, the Bell Music company and the Round Corner drug store.
When six years old, Mr. Fuchs started studying the violin at the Institute of Musical Art under Franz Keisel, teacher of many prominent violinists and the head of the quartet which bore his name.
He was graduated from the Institute at 17, completing an academic course of five years in three.
He has been a soloist with the New York Philharmonic symphony and has sung in summer festival engagements at the New York stadium, Philadelphia. Robin Hood dell, Washington Watergate and in Chicago Grant park.
His sister, Lillian, violinist, and his brother, Harry, solo cellist, are both in the Cleveland orchestra.
WEATHER
Partly cloudy west, mostly cloudy east tonight and Friday with a few snow flurries in northeast and extreme north portions. Colder east and central tonight and in the east Friday; lows tonight 20 northwest to 30 southeast. Highs Friday in 30's.
Orinne Gray Wins Presidency In AWS Election
Orinne Gray, college sophomore, was elected president of the Associated Women Students Wednesday. Anna Jean Holyfield, education junior, won the vice-presidency.
Other officers elected are Norma Lou Falletta, college sophomore, treasurer; Sandra Puliver, college freshman, secretary; Marilyn Hawkinson, college sophomore, Greek club, and Joan Lambert, journalism junior, independent ASC representative.
Poll workers reported a "fairly good" turnout during the day with few women having to stand in line for men. They gave five hundred and sixty women voted.
"There was a rush between classes," Marilyn Metz, college junior and poll worker in Strong, said. "I was pretty slow during clasetime."
Women winning seats in the AWS senate are Jerry Hesse, college junior; Diana Foltz, pharmacy sophomore; Sydney States and Winifred Meyer, college freshmen; Donna Arnold and Victoria Rosenwald, college sophomores.
Poll workers were furnished by organized women's houses through the AWS house of representatives. Each girl worked an hour. Two to three girls worked at each poll.
The ballots were counted by 7:30 last night, but the results were not announced until this morning, because several of the electees could not be contacted.
Science Fraternity To Start Initiation
Sigma Gamma Epsilon, honorary earth science fraternity, will hold its initiation week Monday, March 3, through Thursday, March 6. It will begin with a "rock roll" for the 5:50 pm Monday in front of Lindley hall, and end with a supper at the Dine-a-mite inn 5:30 p.m. Thursday.
Dr. John Imbrie, assistant professor of geology, will be the guest speaker following the supper. His talk will tell "Technology, Science and Geology."
The fraternity will play a basketball game between the members and pledges at 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 3, in Robinson gym.
At 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 5. the formal initiation will begin at Lindley hall where the 15 pledges will be taken out of town for a traditional initiation ceremony.
The installation of cooking facilities at Stephenson hall has been completed and meals will be served starting Saturday.
Cooking Facilities Installed At Dorm
Sister Of KU Student Wins International Pancake Contest
Residents of Stephenson have been eating at Jollipe and Battenfeld halls since the beginning of the school year. The dormitory was opened for occupancy Feb. 14.
By DOT TAYLOR
The winner of the Liberal-Olney, England pancake race is the sister of Max Zimmerman, college sophomore.
“Joan’s the first track star we’ve had in our family. I think she could probably qualify for the Olympics but isn’t her main hobby.” Max said.
The annual Shrove Tuesday race in England from Olney's Bull inn to the door of the church of the Saints Peter and Paul started in 1445. In 1850 the Liberal women challenged the Olney pancake runners.
Joan won over 23 competitors. She covered the 415-yard course in one minute and eight seconds. Rules require the apron-clad contestants to flip a pancake into a skillet twice,
"We ate a lot of pancakes while Joan practiced flipping." Max said.
Joan received a bouquet of roses, a prayer book and a手kerchiefchef Niney and $350 in gift certificates and a pressure cooker from Liberal.
She has received numerous congratulations from British as well as American fans. Queen Elizabeth sent a telegram and Liberal friends sent her five dozen roses.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952 Interpretive Articles
Editorials
Begins Private War Against Chinese Reds
A private war against the Communists in China has been started by the students at Lenoir Rhyne college, Hickory, N.C. It could serve as a beginning point for other student campaigns in the cold war.
The way they are doing it is with hundreds of small plastic bottles, each containing a message. The bottles are flown to the Chinese coast and dropped off to be washed up on the shores of the Communist dominated country.
The small white bottles are marked with Chinese characters saying, "inside you have good news." Inside is a piece of paper bearing a printed heading explaining who it is from and what its purpose is.
"Operation bottles" was announced after many hours of planning, bottle collecting and tedious translating of messages into Chinese characters. Business firms donated the bottles and the transportation to the Pacific area.
Students planning projects similar to this should not be deceived into thinking that they will convert any great number to a republican form of government. Any such plan can reach only a few.
Nevertheless, to take part in a program such as "operation bottles" would be constructive if only for the added strength it would give to democracy. —Joe Taylor.
Sen. Tom Connally's 'Revolt' A'Nonpartisan'Demonstration
Tom Connally, chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee last summer slapped at ECA Administrator William C. Foster, because of his request for 930 million dollars in military and economic aid to Asia. He then set himself against President Truman by espousing a proposal to shift control of the foreign aid program from the State department to the Defense department.
This was construed by some observers as Connally's "revolt" against the Democrat administration's foreign policy of which he has been a staunch supporter since his first election to the Senate in 1929. The senator manifested his full support of Truman's foreign policy in his speech before Congress in January last year, refuting Sen. Robert Taft's attack on it.
Undoubtedly, Connally's "revolt" was a demonstration of his "nonpartisanship" into which he has poured the major labor of his later years. The senator's "nonpartisan" foreign policy certainly merits praise. Every major measure of American foreign policy since World War II has managed to obtain the support of both the Democrats and the Republicans in Congress, although some minor clashes marred the picture from time to time.
However, there is another factor accounting for Connally's "revolt." Texans, who sent him to the Senate for four consecutive terms, are beginning to show signs of aversion to federal spending, which is "too liberal with money for foreigners."
Connally believes his 74-year-old shoulders still are strong enough to bear the heavy job of uniting Congress behind the administration's foreign policy. Therefore, he is determined to seek nomination to a fifth term next July. He must know he will face a hard fight against his rival Daniel Price, Texas attorney general, if he continues to be "too liberal" with foreign aid program.
It is worth noticing how the Democratic foreign relations chairman is trying to bridge the ever-widening schism between the two Congressional groups. —Yujiro Maeda.
00
TELY HUNAGA
Hawaii And Alaska Fighting For Statehood
The issue of statehood for Hawaii and Alaska soon will be before the Senate again.
Hawaii long has been petitioning for statehood. The petition was approved in the House of Representatives by both the 80th and the 81st congresses, but was blocked by the Senate on both occasions. The Islanders began to press the issue in 1935. Their fight was interrupted by the war. Since 1945 they again have taken up the issue and still have not received any encouraging action.
The House would feel the effect of the new representation very slightly because neither territory has a large population. The Senate, on the other hand, would have four new Western members, something the Easterners seem to balk at. From this it is easily seen that the two territories would be able to make their presence felt in Congress, but surely not so much as to be a just cause for the "shameful" attitude which Mr. Farrington describes.
Alaska has not been seeking a charter as long as Hawaii. The Northern territory does not seem to be as statehood-conscious as Hawaii. Hawaii has its governmental machinery all set up to comply with statehood requirements. It even has a state constitution drafted. Alaska, on the other hand, would not be ready for actual admission for a year or more once it was accented.
Hawaii is largely Republican. Alaska is largely Democratic. This gives each party a handful of supporters. But the fact that both are Western territories loses the support of the Eastern senators.
There is a definite desire on the part of residents in both territories to join the union and receive the advantages of statehood. There is a slight split in Hawaii, however, with a few of the minority Caucasian people balking at the thought of being represented by congressmen of
Recently Joseph R. Farrington, Hawaii's delegate to Congress, condemned the attitude concerning adoption in Washington as being "shameful and disgraceful." He said the whole question there seems to be one of politics and not one of objectivity.
another race.
Robert Houvener, education senior from Honolulu, and Robert Cameron, education freshman from Papaaloa, cast their votes for the status quo, saying nothing is to be gained by Hawaii becoming a state.
Tami Nonaka, college senior from Kauai, and Vernon Chang, education junior from Oahu, say they are very much in favor of statehood for Hawaii. They feel that Hawaiia has shown its qualification for statehood both in peace and war. Miss Tami said the Hawaiian people are very statehood-conscious.
Robert Brandt, graduate student from Ft. Yukon, Alaska, says the people in Alaska are very much in favor of statehood. The great fishing and mining industries there, he said, are largely owned by outside interests that take a lot of money out of Alaska and bring little in. Statehood would provide legislation permitting tariffs protecting Alaska from such losses.
There are three requirements that must be met by incorporated territories seeking admission as states:
(1.) The inhabitants must be sympathetic to principles of democracy as exemplified in the American form of government.
(2.) The majority of the electorate must wish statehood.
(3.) There must be sufficient population and economic resources to support a state government and to help carry a share of the federal government's expense.
Both Alaska and Hawaii not only meet these requirements but go beyond them. Both could serve as models for the U.S. on some points of practicing democracy, especially in race relations. Both have high year-round wages and high living standards. Hawaii's education and health standards surpass those of most of the states.
Granting admission to these two territories not only would increase our hold on two highly strategic positions but would enhance our leadership in world affairs and contribute to national security. —Roger Yarrington.
Four Arguments Against UMT
。
Dear editor:
The Friends committee for national legislation reports some interesting information on the current debate, and students opposing permanent conscription and the consequent militarization of our country might be interested in it.
As valid as is opposition to UMT on the grounds of morality, peace and individual freedom, at present the main congressional opposition against UMT stems from four causes:
(1) UMT is not feasible now with the shortage of manpower and the use of Selective Service to build a larger standing force.
(3) The cost is great—more than 4 billion dollars the first year and more than 2 billion dollars each succeeding year.
(2) UMT is not the best way of building up a military reserve, nor will it permit an early reduction of the armed forces.
This month will be one of crucial battle for those of us who wish to prevent the spread of militarism. We must raise our voices in protest against the proposed UMT program. In doing so we must talk in terms of peace and individual freedom, but we should also keep in mind these reasons why Congressmen are backing away from UMT.
Howard W. Hallman Class of 1950
(4) UMT will increase military control and bureaucracy.
A good way to restore glitter to your gold ring or fraternity pin is to rub the article with onion juice. Let it dry thoroughly and rub off with a soft cloth. You will find that all that is gold will glitter.
Men, Follow Your Instincts; Treat Your Women Rough
(The Syracuse Daily Orange recently received a letter from two women at the school. We print it for the benefit of those of you who have been trying to repress your cave-man instincts.) Dear Editor:
Before entering college we had great expectations concerning the college man. Needless to say we were gravely disappointed.
What has happened to the rugged, outdoor man? He is no longer so rugged. He eats soft food, sleeps too much, and considers the slightest physical exertion too much for him. He is never outdoors, his social life being centered around the parlor. A game of chess or a snappy bull session is all the exercise he gets.
Masculine individuality has become a mirage. It seems that everything he does is inspired by the group to which he belongs. He no longer has the power to think and decide for himself.
As an example, when he is on date, the girl must be prepared to decide what movie they will see, what they will do afterwards, and she must even plan to spend the evening entertaining him.
Obviously something has to be done. Here is a challenge to the men of Syracuse university. A few months ago you denounced us girls for wearing slacks and jeans. We would be only too glad to give them back to you, if you'd begin to earn your pants.
University Daily Kansan
News Room Student Newspaper of the Ad Room KU 251 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU 376
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Joe Losteilic, Jim Powers
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Business Manager ... Dorothy Hedrick
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Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University hour except Saturday and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Enter information below.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination dates. Enter second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan.. Post Office under order of March 25.
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Music Teachers Attend Meeting
Nine members of the music staff are attending the annual meeting of the Music Teachers National association Monday through Thursday in Dallas.
University Daily Kansan
Dr. D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano and life member of the MTNA executive committee, gave a talk at the luncheon meeting of the Oklahoma Music Teachers association Tuesday.
Marcus Hahn, instructor of music education, spoke on a music theory program. Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education, and Dr. James Nickerson, associate professor of music education, addressed the psychology section.
Also attending are Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts, G. Criss Simpson, associate professor of organ and theory, and Miss Jeannette Cass, associate professor of music theory.
Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, spoke on a voice panel. Laurel Anderson, professor of organ and theory, spoke at a theory session.
Proficiency Exam Registration Set
Students desiring to take the spring semester proficiency examination in English composition must register March 3. 4 or 5.
Registration will be held for College students at the College office, 229 Strong; education students at the education office, 103 Fraser; journalism majors at the journalism office, 105 Journalism, and fine arts majors at the fine arts office, 128 Strong.
Any student who fails to register will not be admitted to the examination.
The examinatin will be given at 2 p.m. Saturday, March 8, for students of junior and senior standing in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Education, School of Journalism and School of Fine Arts.
20 Engineers To Go On 2-Day Field Trip
Twenty members of the Society of American Military Engineers will make a two-day field trip to the 50-million-dollar Harlan county dam on the Republican river near Alma, Neb. April 10 and 11.
They will be conducted through the dam by the district supervisor. Those accompanying the group will be Col. Edward F. Kumpe, professor of military science; Capt. Bernard Turkla, assistant professor of military science; Col. Peter C. Bullard, chief of Kansas Military district, and T. F. McMahon, assistant professor, and D. D. Haines, associate professor of civil engineering.
The society will send a letter to national HAJAS headquarters in Cincinnati to learn if a national insignia has been adopted for HAJAS squadrons.
Hap Arnold Junior Air society has set March 14 as the date for a stag party.
Air Society Plans Stag Party March 14
图
The group saw a film on the development of airships.
Fewer Veterans Are Enrolled But KU Bureau Keeps Busy
By SHIRLEY LYON
Despite the fact that there are 4,698 fewer veterans on the campus now than there were in 1948, the Veterans Bureau still manages to keep busy.
As of last fall, 1,902 veterans, including 33 women, were enrolled at the University. Not all veterans at the University are here under the G. I. Bill of Rights, although many of their affairs are handled by the bureau.
Provision 346 of the G, I. Bill of Rights, under which many are attending, expires July, 1956. As yet, there is no similar provision applying to veterans fighting in the Korean area.
Each case is handled separately by the Veterans' bureau in contrast to the production line method used during the peak of veteran enrollment in 1948 when 6,400 veterans attended classes here.
"If Congress provides for college education for the Korean veterans as it did for World War II veterans, there probably will be a large number of veterans on the campus again as there was in 1948," Dr. Elbel said.
"Our biggest problem is getting information to veterans attending school under the bill and interpreting to them the regulations of the Veterans Administration," he said.
"It is more difficult to get the job done now," E. R. Elbel, director of the Veterans bureau, explained.
During the past six years that Dr. Elbel has been director of the University Veterans bureau, he said he has found the veterans very fine to deal with despite complicated rules and regulations involved.
Robert Miller, February graduate in engineering, is teaching in the aeronautical engineering department. His courses are Design II and Aircraft Structure I and III.
Robert Miller Joins Faculty
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As a result of the program many young men and women have been able to create names for themselves in many fields, especially science, Dr. Elbel said.
Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952
Med Students Favor Family Doctor Idea
Philadelphia—(U,P)—Medical students at the University of Pennsylvania have decided to do something about a recent gripe of medical authorities—over-emphasis on medical specialization in medical schools.
The future doctors have formed an organization known as the General Practice society, dedicated to the reassertion of the traditional ideals of the "family" doctor and the emphasizing of the basic role of the general practitioner as the keystone of the medical profession.
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Baseball Season To Open April 5
Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952
Kansas will play four non-conference games before launching into a campaign of 18 Big Seven assignments for its 1952 baseball schedule.
Athletic Director A. C. Dutch Lonborg announced the 22-game slate Wednesday, which includes an opening stretch against Wichita, twice against Rockhurst, and Emporia State. The Jayhawkers open their conference season in Lincoln April 18 and 19 against Nebraska.
Coach Hub Ulrich will welcome back nine lettermen when outdoor practice opens Monday.
These include outfielders Charles Beether, Walt Hicks, and Frank Mischikl; infielders Curt Harris and George Voss; catchers Galen Fiss and Dean Smith, and pitchers Carl Sandefur and Jack Stonestreet.
April 5, Wichita at Wichita; April 8, Rockhurst at Lawrence; April 12, Emporia State at Emporia; April 16, Rockhurst at Kansas City; April 18-19, Nebraska at Lincoln; April 21-22, Missouri at Lawrence.
April 25-26, Kansas State at Lawrence; April 28-29, Iowa State at Lawrence; May 2-3, Colorado at Boulder; May 7-8, Oklahoma at Lawrence; May 12-13, Kansas State at Manhattan; May 16-17, Iowa State at Ames; May 19-20, Missouri at Columbia.
The 1952 schedule:
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STUDENT Union Book Store
Page 4 University Daily Kansan
Wes Santee May Set Big Seven Mile Record
By BOB NOLD
Attention all track records. Distance records take particular note, because your existence is in danger. Wes Santee (education sophomore) is running.
Santee, a lanky speedster, is known to be especially dangerous in the mile. He hopes to set a new Big Seven indoor track meet mile record Saturday. The present record of 4:17.2 is held jointly by Bill McGuire of Missouri and Bob Karnes of Kansas.
Santee's strategy is already mapped. "I plan to run the first lap in 61 seconds, finish the half in 2:04 or 2:05, and finish three quarters in 3:09 or 3:10. This should set me up for a 4:15 or faster mile. It is important to set up time schedules before each race," he explained.
LANSAY
21
WES SANTEE
Santee first showed signs of becoming a great runner in his senior
year in high school. He set a new Kansas state record of 4:26 in the regional at Hutchinson. His time in the state meet that year was 4:28.4. It tied Glenn Cunningham's state meet record, but Santee was beaten in that race, and the record was broken by Wes's arch rival, Bill Tidwell.
This was Santee's only loss to Tidwell in high school and he rectified it by beating his rival, who is now on the Emporia State Teachers' college team, in their only meeting this year.
His time in the mile at the indoor dual meet with Missouri university Saturday was 4:18.3. His fastest time to date is 4:17.6 set against Nebraska Feb. 16. In practice, however, he ran a 4:16 time trial on the indoor track at Memorial stadium.
Santee's future plans include cutting his three-quarter mile time to 3:00 in the spring season and he plans to run either the two mile or 5,000 meter race in the NCAA meet.
"My best chance to place in the Olympics, is in the 5,000 meters. The longer the race the better I run. I finished second to Fred Wilt last vean," he said.
"I have improved this year, and I should win an Olympic berth (the first, second, and third place runners qualify for the team).
Santece said he surprised Wilt last year. "When Wilt wilt around after crossing the finish line and found me close enough to shake hands, he said 'are you part Indian'"
He continued, "It wasn't until later in the shower that Wilt congratulated me."
Santee said he can only sit still for a certain length of time and then he has to run. "I get fidgety feet," he said.
NIT Tournament To Fill Positions
New York —(U.P.)— The National Invitation Basketball tournament was expected to fill most, if not all, of its remaining five berths today.
These are the teams considered to be foremost in the running, with their records: Western Kentucky (24-4), Loyola of Chicago (16-7), NYU (16-5), Villanova (16-7), Seattle (26-7), DePaul (18-8), LaSalle (18-5), Lawrence Tech (23-2), Texas Christian (20-3), Wyoming (23-5), and 1951 winner Brigham Young (13-8).
A&P Super Market
GOOD FOODS FOR QUICK MEALS
Van Camp's 8 oz. pkg.
**TENDERONI** 10c
A&P No. 2 Can
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Ann Page 2-16 oz. Cans
**SPAGHETTI** 25c
Van Camp's 300 Can
**SPANISH RICE** 2 for 35c
Derby . . with beans 16 oz. Can
**CHILI CON CARNE** 29c
Country Dozen
**FRESH EGGS** 33c
Angel Food 15 oz.
**CAKES** 49c
Whole Sun 6 oz. Can
**ORANGE JUICE** 2 for 29c
These prices good through Sat. March 1, 1952
Basketball Scores
Fairfield 68, Providence 67
Brown 12, Rhode Island 69
Fordham 70, Rutgers 59
Pennell 50
Penn State 64, West Virginia 65
Drexel 91, Franklin and Marshall 85'
LaFayette 90, Lehigh 59
Maryland 69, W. Michigan 69
West, Kentucky 94, Ky, Wes. 68
William and Mary 87, Virginia 85
Maryland 54, Richmond 50
Oakland (California) 87
Miss Southern 92, La, Col. 93
N.C. State 65, Wake Forest 51
Loyola (IL). 85, Illinois Tech 61
Bradley 54, Houston 50
Houston State 57, Utah State 53
*Overtime.*
Professor To Show KU Historical Slides
E. R. Elbel, professor of physical education, will speak and show slides on the "Early Days at KU" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, at the KU Faculty club.
Professor Elbel has made a study of the history of the University and has made a collection of pictures of events and personalities. The pictures have been arranged into a series of slides. They deal primarily with the school's athletic history.
YES! GOOD FELLOWS GET
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YES! GOOD FELLOWS GET
THEIR Manhattan SHIRTS AT
the university shop
MEN'S APPAREL
When good fellows get together they wear Sportshirts by Manhattan
Mandarin
Indoors or out, when you see a crowd of campus biggies relaxing, you're sure to notice that the really smart boys are wearing Manhattan Sportshirts. The reason is as simple as a snap course. Manhattan Sportshirts are style-right, handsomely tailored, and so darned comfortable you just hate to take 'em off. Manhattan has them in long and short sleeves . . . in a wide variety of colors and patterns all in the finest fabrics. All are the sportiest you could put on your back when you want to take it easy!
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Indoor Track Meet Draws Top Talent
Kansas and Oklahoma are the premeet favorites, but no school in the conference has enough power to rule out the possibility of an upset.
The twenty-fourth annual Big Seven indoor track meet will be the big attraction in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium this weekend as the conference schools battle for the indoor crown.
A glittering array of stars will again shoot for the records, which each year become more difficult to break. Such men as Kansas Bob Kobel and Tom Siddall from recent seasons, have made the records hard to reach.
One of the best bets for a new record is in the mile relay. The favorite in this event is the Oklahoma Sooners. The present record is 3:22.1, but at the Michigan State relays the Sooners ran a torrid 3:19.7.
A meeting of volleyball managers will be held at 4 p.m. Monday in 202 Robinson gym. Information concerning tournament play and rules will be discussed. Entry blanks are available in the intramural office, 107 Robinson.
Friday is the deadline for all men's intramural volleyball entries. This is the next team sport in the intramural program and entries must be in tomorrow for teams to participate.
The Kansas relay team of Bob
Volleyball Entries To Be In Friday
There will be fraternity A, B, and C division competition, and independent A and B. In the fraternity division each house may enter one A, one B and as many C teams as they wish. In the independent division, each dormitory may enter one A and as many B rows as desired.
Agency Unable To Enforce ACE Plan
New York —(U,P)—The American Council on Education's program for controlling intercollegiate athletics appeared doomed to failure today as two eastern college accrediting agencies announced they could not enforce it.
Officials of the Middle Atlantic States and New England States College and Secondary School associations said they could not enforce the ACE code because it is "impractual" and beyond their function.
Chancellor Murphy will address a group of University alumni at a dinner at Great Bend Thursday night. Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary will also attend.
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DeVinney, Frank Cindrich, John Deiderer and Don Smith are expected to give the OU squad plenty of competition in this event. Iowa State also figures strongly in the relay.
Unless an upset is registered, the Jayhawkers are favored to take both the mile and two-mile races. Herb Semper and Wes Santee, two of the fastest men in Kansas track history, should earn vital points in these events.
In the meet last year, Semper ran a blazing 9:11.3 in the two-mile. It is doubtful if he will top this time Saturday because he will also compete in the mile, but a 9:12.9 against Missouri last week ruled it a possibility.
The records in both the high and low hurdles could be in danger from Dion Bedek of Nebraska and Merger of Colorado. The present record is .074,7.
Santee has ran the mile in 4:17.6 against Nebraska in a dual meet, and this is only slightly above the conference indoor record of 4:17.2.
Missouri's Bob Gordon and George Holley of Colorado are figured to try for the 6-5% high jump record, established in 1948 by Tom Scofield of Kansas. Both of these men have cleared the .6-5 mark.
Kansas' basketball B-team will close a ten-game season tonight against Kansas State's towering freshmen in Manhattan.
KU 'B' Team Plays Tonight
Paced by Allen Kelley, scrappy sophomore brother of Varsity Guard, Dean, Dick Harp's Junior Jayhawks have won seven of nine starts to date. They hold double wins over Baker, and Warrensburg Teachers, a split in two games with Olathe Naval Air station, and single wins against Missouri B and Forbes Air base of Topeka.
Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page 5
Harp is expected to start Ken Buller, 5-11 junior from Buhler, and Everette Dye, 6-2 Independence sophomore, at forwards; Wes Witney, 6-3 Newton sophomore, at center, and Dean Smith, 5-10 Topeka junior, and Kelley, at the guards.
By upending the Cats, the Kansars could square accounts for a 48-54 loss in Lawrence February 8.
Books For Gifts and your own library
Your are cordially invited to come in and browse.
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McClure 10 lb. Bag
POTATOES 59c
Texas New
CABBAGE 1b. 5c
Cello
CARROTS 2 for 29c
Whole Sun Frozen 6 oz. Can
ORANGE JUICE 2 for 27c
Snow Crop 12 oz. pkgs.
PEAS 2 for 43c
California Pascal Large Stalks
CELERY 2 for 29c
Quality Meats
Armour's Star half or whole lb.
**HAMS** 49c
Cello Whiting lb.
**FISH** 19c
Fresh-ground lb.
**HAMBURGER** 59c
U.S. Choice lb.
**CHUCK ROAST** 69c
Fancy Brook lb.
**TROUT** 75c
Ready to Cook Lake lb.
**SMELT** 49c
Values Galore
Select Alaska 1 lb. Can
SALMON 35c
Flemings or Folgers lb.
COFFEE 85c
Flavor Kist lb.
CRACKERS 29c
Del Monte 46 oz. Can
TOMATO JUICE 25c
Fisher's 2 lb. Box
CHEESE SPREAD 69c
Popular Brands pkg.
CIGARETTES 20c
Carton $1.95
Delta Chi Lists Guests At Buccaneer Ball
Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952
University Daily Kansan
Amidst cannibals, pirates and captives, Delta Chi fraternity held its annual costume party Feb. 23. The party was called the Buccaneer ball.
the chaperones were Mrs. Hazel H. Jenkins, Mrs. Dana L. Anderson, Mrs. Edna M. Stewart and Mrs. James A. Hooke.
The guests were Nancy Taggart, Bobbie Dunn, Lila Tessendorf, Maxine Ratslaff, Marilyn Hanson, Patty Soden, Audra Bullinger, Pat Hurst, Bonnie Roberts, Corilee Fullerton, Joyce Cox and Kathryn Rohwer.
Glenna Williams, Karen Hilmer, Barbara Dieckman, Jane Henry, Shirley Dodd, Jenne Walker, Marjorie Hockenhull, Marilyn Christgen, Jo Smith, Donna Francis, Barbara Brammer, Dolores Martin, Nancy Danforth and Jo Ann Anderson.
Sally Freeman, Jane Hanna, Mary Agnes Leach, Betty Harmon, Barbara Bateman, Patricia Flanagan, Mary Louise Harding, Virginia Ferguson, Patricia Aylward, Sheila Moshan, Barbara Paulsding, Margaret Porter, Jeanee Fischer and Frances Mason.
Miller hall entertained with its annual Joe's Place costume party Saturday. The theme of the party was a modern Chicago night club. Guests came dressed as characters who might happen into the club.
Miller Hall Holds Joe's Place Party
The chaperones were Mrs. John Skie Sr., Mrs. Edward Dickss, Mrs R. R. Hooper and Mrs. R. G. Roche Guests were George McCume, Gene Shank, Jerry Jones, John Stewart, Roger Price, Paul Dohi, Don Worthington, Ted Royer, John Eylar, Walter Schoen, Norman Weare, Le Johnson, Leonard Gerriton.
Ron Evans, Bill Nance, Mel Denberg, Ray Tietz, Dean Cole, Bruce Boardman, Paul Nelson, Don Harmonson, Paul Stalley, Darrell Brown, John Newton, Ron Sammers, Roger Warren, Robert Roberts, Vic Rew, Ken Cox, Leon Stromale, Bob Mairs, John Olson.
Joyce Shank, Bill Foster, Beverly Barnhardt, Tom Murphy, Neva Thipp, Gene Legler, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wenger, and Mrs. Vernon H. Sammons.
Page 6
Schanzer Family Likes Gnocchi
The following recipe of an inexpensive dish was submitted by Mrs. George O. Schanzer, Italian-born wife of an assistant professor of Spanish. It is called Gnoecchi, or small potato dumplings, and is a favorite of Mrs. Schanzer's. $ \textcircled{4} $
Gnocchi
5 medium size potatoes (about
2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Ibs.).
1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ to 2 cups of flour.
1 teaspoon of salt.
3 quarts of boiling salted v
Boil potatoes until well done. Pee, and mash thoroughly. Place on floured board and mix well with salt and flour—some potatoes will require less, others more. Knead potato dough well. Roll into finger-thin roll and cut into pieces one inch long. Roll each piece lightly over a fork, giving it a caterpillar shape. Array on top of potato soup or board. Put oucchior in boiling water and let them boil until they come to the surface (about 15 minutes). Remove from water with strainer and place in serving dish. Add sauce—your favorite sauce for Italian spaghetti. Mix well and sprinkle with Parmesan or melted cheese. Serves four.
Hillel Foundation Elects Officers
Abraham Lipschitz, graduate student, and Thelma Valenstein, a former student now in education and social work, were elected copresidents of the Hillel foundation at a business meeting Sunday evening in the Fine room of the Union
Six members at large were also selected. They are Seymour Baumgarten, Arnold Freed and Lila Weisenberg, graduate students; Shirley Horwitz, college freshman, and Rosa Weitzner, college sophomore.
Other officers elected were Samuel Wilen, graduate student, secretary-treasurer, and Renee Benjaminov, former student, corresponding secretary.
Benjamin S. Benjaminov, college senior, is counselor for the foundation.
Indians, whether or not they live on reservations, have the vote in every state on the same basis as other people.
SPORT SHIRTS PRINT
Official Bulletin
International Relations club, p.m. Tuesday, dinner at the Hearsom Tea room. Mrs. Chan Ossborn, speaker. Call Betty Barton at 415 for reservation by noon Monday.
Lutheran Student association will have a joint meeting with K-State at Manhattan Sunday. Meet at church at 3:15 p.m. Call Carol Miller after 4:30 p.m. at 2882R if planning to go.
10
Special KuKu meeting 7:15 tonight. 105 Green. Please attend.
ASME meeting, 7:30 tonight. Pine room, Memorial Union. Field trips and exposition to be discussed.
West Indian and a host of other prints are here for your choosing. Comfort and color — the new way to leisure!
No firing for Women's Rifle club
Friday afternoon.
NOTICE: NEW STORE HOURS THURSDAY-9 A.M. to 9 P.M. OTHER DAYS-9 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.
Mathematical collouqium 5 p.m.
203 Strong, Dr. Earl A. Coddington
Three new German films in soune (Bavarian Alps, Lake Constance, Munsterland) will be shown 5 today, 15 Fraser, no charge.
Pershing Rifies smoker, 8 tonight. Military Science lounge. Wear uniforms.
Gibbs Clothing Co.
811 Mass. St.
Special ASC meeting, 8 tonight, 110 Fraser.
2. 95 to 5.95
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 tonight, 206 Strong. All
Now Leisure Goes Colorful!
Math club, 5 today, 203 Strong. Mathematical recreations. Everyone welcome.
IVCF Missionary meeting, 12 noon 12:50 Friday, Danforth chapel.
Openings for editor and business manager for K-Book, K-Calendar and Student Directory. Written applications to be submitted to Bill Stinson, dean of men's office, deadline March 1. For details contact Bill Stinson.
welcome.
AWS Senate, 4:30 today, in the lounge. All new and old members please be present.
Faculty forum meeting, Monday noon, Faculty club. "Are Our Moral and Ethical Standards Changing"
Jewish service, Hillel foundation,
6:45 p.m. Friday, Danforth chapel.
All welcome.
Last night to tryout for "College Daze" 7-10 p.m. Military Science. Psychology club, 7:30 tonight, 9 Strong.
Tickets for the Tau Sigma Recital, Tuesday, may be purchased in the Women's Physical Education office. 50c each.
Your
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Lindley's Kansas Cleaners WHERE QUALITY IS FIRST
Ladies' Plain Dresses
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Weslev Foundation Elects
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity will entertain Alpha Delta Pi sorority with a hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Thomas A. Clark and Mrs. Harry Ryan.
Ronald Sammons, college sophomore, recently was elected president of the Wesley foundation. Other officers are Darrell Brown, vicepresident, and Barbara Lee Thompson, secretary. The officers will appoint a cabinet and the entire group will be installed Monday, March 3.
Going To Europe Next Year-1953
Downs Travel Service is now accepting steamship reservations in tourist, cabin and first class travel to and from Europe for 1953. Remember, low cost ship space is difficult to secure. Therefore, make your reservations now. No depot necessary.
Phone 3661
Open Evenings
Mrs. Lois Odaffer
Mr. Joe Brown
downs
travel service
1015½ massachusetts st.
lawrence, kansas
downs
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1015½ massachusetts st.
lawrence, kansas
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Thursday. Feb. 28, 1952 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
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Classified Advertising Rates
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Asus must be cailed in New York on or before the ceptation (saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals must be received by 1:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
One day ...50c ...1c
25 words or less Additional words
Three Five
days days
75c $1.00
2c 3c
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange tours or individual itineraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass.
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip reductions. All expense
tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book
passes. No early退费. Call Miss Gleaseman at
National Bank for information and res-
ervations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPIST: References; prompt, accurate service and late model Royal typewriter. Convenient to KU Bring to 1724 Indiana or call Mrs. Blesner. 2011r. IT
TYPING: Experienced in reports term papers, theses, notes and stencil cutting. Not attention given. Phone 1952WJ, Mr. Robert Lewis, 1915 Tenn. 28
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-4
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. L. Rocco, 83 Lm. LA4. 4 upstairs. 2175J.
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 am.
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STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 8604, 1194 Mass. tt
RV AND TV repair service on all
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CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandals, mails, home-made plies and craft items for customers Air-conditioned. Open, 8 a.m., till midnight. Crystal Café 609 Vt.
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Phone 10 for Sho Time TODAY thru SAT.
THE END OF THE MIGHTY HERO IN THE
INDIAN UPRISING
in SUPER COLOUR
A COLUMNA PICTURE
EDWARD SMALL Presentation GEORGE MONTGOMERY
Late News Events Sports "Ski In Sky"
WRITER'S CRAMP? Rent a typewriter and type those notes, themes and compositions. Only $3.50 per month or $1.00 per week at your Student Union Book Store.
SPECIAL RATES for students on Time, Life, and Fortune magazines. We take subscriptions to all magazines. p.S. You rebate too. Student Union Book Store.
THRIFT BOOK HOLDERS!! We have received a new supply of Jayhawk ash trays. Stop in and get yourows. Row. 29
Book Store.
LOST
HANDS FREE when writing or typing.
A BOOK-EASE marks any reference section such as vocabulary. etc. See them at the Student Union Book Store. 3
EXPERENCIED fur restleyer and repair-
tailing and alterations. Phone
1161W, 544-9720.
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop, including a one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Petshop. 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt
FOR SALE
HELP WANTED
CARGILL, INC., specialists in serving agriculture--Mr. John Savage will be on view seniors interested in a training program in this organization. Interested Business Placement Bureau, 214 Strong, to sign the interview schedule.
4
WANTED: CLERK-TYPIST by reliable Lawrence firm. Vacation and overtime pay. State schooling and experience. Write P.O. Box 412, Lawrence, Kans. 4
LEARN LANGUAGE the easy way.
French, German, and Spanish verb
wheels solve all your difficulties. Student Union Book Store. 3
MISCELLANEOUS
VIS-ED vocabulary cards in French,
German, and Spanish will help you to
an "A"). See them today at your Student
Union Book Store. 3
REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales-
buyers. buyers. William □
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FRIDAY-SATURDAY
Last Times Tonite Open 6:45 p.m.
2 DARING PICTURES "FIVE" and "M"
PARKER 51 PEN and Pencil set in red
Return to 1393 W. Campus or call 3510- 30.
*
VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Picture Deadline March 10
All graduating seniors should make an appointment to have their pictures taken at Hixson's studio as soon as possible, but they must be taken before Monday, March 10, in order to appear in the Jayhawk. The total expense is $2.81.
Johnny Carpenter
"BADMAN'S GOLD"
and
Oil Boom Days
In Oklahoma!
"DOUBLE DEAL"
Ch. 3 "Iron Horse"
Ch. 3 "Iron Horse"
Answer To Value Of Algae Sought By KU Botanists
Algae are the smallest and most simple of nature's plants. Yet in regard to rehabilitation of Kansas soil they are big shots.
A few of the answers as to how these little fellows can toss so much weight around are being sought by botanists at the University.
One of the debates will be held at the Emporia Kiwanis club and the other will be held on the Emporia college campus.
Dr. R. H. Thompson associate professor of botany and director of the study, puts it this way:
"Even though algae play a very significant part in the prevention of wind erosion, in vegetation of totally denuded areas, and act as nitrogen fixers, little study has been made of them."
The KU study is the first such research in Kansas and one of the few attempted in the United States. A University grant from research appropriated by 1831 legislature has made the project possible.
"If you would buildoze off the top soil of some ground," Dr. Thompson explained, "it would be the algae which would prepare the way for other plants and revegetation of the area. The algae are carried to the barren area by the wind, and begin their work of developing
Only 38 research projects on the characteristics of the algae of the world's soils have been completed, Dr. Thompson said. He of these 22 stone in England, 9 in Europe, 2 in India and 5 in the United States.
A measure adopted in January changing the constitution to set up associate and special memberships was discussed.
Under the associate membership, which is designed primarily for parents of students now in school, a non-graduate of the University of Chicago should receiveazine and attend the alumni meetings, but he is allowed no vote.
Alumni Association Expands Membership
The Alumni association's new expansion program was discussed by the Alumni board in a meeting Monday.
The special membership is a nonvoting status designed for faculty members who are not graduates of the University.
These new types of membership permit interested persons to participate in alumni activities. Control of the association is kept in the hands of University graduates.
Heywood Davis and Stephen Rench, college seniors, will speak on the affirmative side of the subject 'Resolved, that the Federal Government Should Adopt a Program o Permanent Wage and Price Controls.'
"The algae prepare the way for mosses to get started and pave the way for grasses which follow. The working of the algae together with bacteria and protozoa make for the development of humus needed for plant growth."
humus and producing a gelatinous secretion which binds the soil together.
Two University debate teams will go to Emporia State Teacher's college Tuesday, March 4 to compete against two Emporia teams.
Just what characteristics these one called algae have in their soil-rebuilding activities is the specific object of the KU study.
Win Koerper, college senior, and Kenneth Dam, college sophomore will take the negative side in the debate on the campus.
Working with Dr. Thompson is Russell Keeler, college senior.
2 Debate Teams To Go To Emporia
The four KU students will be accompanied by Kim Giffin, assistant professor of speech.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952
Hope In Youth, Scholarship, Guest Lecturer Tells Faculty
The youth of the world is half of the hope of the world, the other half is the long tradition of scholarship, said Dr. Gilbert Highet, guest lecturer in the Humanities series, in an address to the University faculty Monday afternoon in Strong auditorium.
Group Hears Mathematicians
Two internationally-known mathematicians are speaking to the mathematical colloquium this week.
Dr. M. Krasner, maitre de recherches at the National Center of Scientific research in Paris, discussed "The Complete Product of Groups and the Extension Problem," Thursday. He is in the United States making a lecture tour.
Dr. Earl A. Coddington of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will speak at 5 p.m. Friday on "The Special Representatives of Ordinary Differential Operators."
The colloquium is a group of graduate students and mathematics professors who meet weekly to study mathematical theories and problems. ___
K-Book, Directory Positions Open
Applications are now being taken for editors and business managers for the 1952-53 K-Book and Student Directory.
William Stinson, engineering senior and chairman of the publications committee, said applicants should write a letter giving their field of study and experience. The letter may be addressed either to Stinson or the office of the dean of men.
The applications should be in by Saturday, March 8, he said. They will be judged by the publications committee of the All Student Council.
Stinson said the publications committee will be looking for a student interested in the jobs and with the type experience the jobs call for.
Indian School Tests To Be Interpreted
Interpretation of results of the Indian Service Testing program for principals, supervisors, and teachers in Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico will be made by two faculty members. E. Gordon Collister, director of the Guidance bureau, and Kenneth E. Anderson, associate professor of education.
Prof. Collister and Prof. Anderson will be accompanied by Madison L. Coombs, educational specialist in testing with the U. S. Indian Service, whose offices are at Haskell institute.
The program was administered to 8,500 pupils in public schools, Indian Service schools, and mission schools in the three states.
Socialist Club To Sell Anvil. Student Partisan
The Socialist Study club will sell the winter issue of Anvil & Student Partisan next week on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at 12th and Oread and 14th and Louisiana.
The issue features a discussion of "Liberal Values in the Modern World" by C. Wright Mills, sociologist and author of "White Collar"; an Open Letter to Aneurin Bevan, view on Blank Fabor, and rearmonics of A. J. Mills; national chairman of the Fellowship of Reconciliation; articles on Negro Literature in America, and the Role of History under Stalinism.
Piano Recital Postponed
The recital by Paul Snyder, associate professor of piano, which was scheduled for Sunday, has been postponed until Sunday, March 30.
Travel Service
Responsibility is assumed for both by the teacher and the change must be met by personal and departmental readjustment, asserted Dr. Highet, professor of Latin at Columbia university.
"A great many students come without knowing their capacities and abilities," he said. "It is vital that a teacher give the elements of a subject to a student having no other courses in the field; that a teacher immediately provides guidance and direction for those specializing and that a teacher attract and stimulate those entirely ignorant of the subject.
THE
"Teachers suffer from the danger of departmentalization," he told his listeners. The department needs to function outside of its specified limits in sharing with other departments.
"The world we live in is much more like the Renaissance world in terms of scholarship," Dr. Highet continued. "Material makes changes, new discoveries are brought about, new alters and tremendous gaps result."
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But the picture is encouraging instead of discouraging, Mr. Highet contended. The whole tradition is based on "the spirit" of the vitality of our own subject."
"We increase our knowledge so much that we find it difficult to teach, but you master a subject, very difficult to teach it." Dr. Highet believes.
Thornton Cooke, '93, founder of the Columbia National bank in Kansas City, Mo., died Monday. He had been ill two weeks with pneumonia
Graduate Of 1893 Dies In Missouri
Mr. Cooke was secretary of the Kansas Bankers association and after moving to Missouri, became the chief of the Missouri Bankers association.
Mr. Cooke played end on the University football team during his undergraduate days.
He once served as city attorney of
Kan, and in 1900 was elected mayor.
He established the Columbia National bank in 1919 and served as its president until 1947.
A notice in yesterday's Daily Kansas should have read: There are no changes in University parking regulations in zone "T".
No Parking Changes In 'T'
More than 4,000 varieties of plant life are found in North Carolina, ranging from subtropical to species common to northern Canada.
Japan Signs Agreement Granting Eastern Defense Bases To U.S.
Tokyo—(U.P.) Japan signed an agreement today granting the United States air, naval and army bases in Japan to serve as a defense of the islands and a barrier to Communist expansion in the Pacific.
News Roundup
The agreement implements the U.S.-Japanese security treaty. It becomes effective with the ratification of the Japanese peace treaty and the end of occupation.
Clauses in the agreement giving legal jurisdiction to American commanders over crimes committed by American troops manning the bases have aroused considerable minority and press criticism.
All American forces in Japan, including those serving the UN in Korea, are listed as "U.S. security forces," under the agreement. The negotiators made no attempt to work out a formula for sharing defense costs. The U.S. accepted Japan's 1952-53 budget appropriation of about $175 million, as its share of the first year's cost.
The agreement was reached after four weeks of negotiations here. It grants the American forces general assurance of adequate facilities for operation, exempts them from Japanese taxes and immigration rules and allows them to carry out certain business activities on the bases. The Americans are barred from Japanese politics and prohibited to violate Japanese law.
Warren To Enter Wisconsin Primary
London — (U.P.) — The Duke of Windsor, a lonely figure in black, sailed New York in the liner, Eliza Doolittle to resume his self-imposed exile.
The California governor, who came to Wisconsin Wednesday and spent the day and the evening in conferences at Milwaukee, said he would campaign actively before the April 1 primary. His entry becomes official with the filing of papers with the secretary of state here.
Duke Of Windsor Returns To America
Madison, Wis.—(U.P.)—Gov. Earl Warren of California, his knowledge of Wisconsin politics freshened by a series of hotel room conferences with his backers in the Badger state, arrived here today to file as a Republican presidential candidate.
His secretary disclosed that he intended to come back within a few months.
As the result, there was speculation that he might bring his Duchess next time, either under an agreement with the royal family by which she would be ranked as a "Royal Highness" or without the agreement. In that event, she would rank as an ordinary duchess, well down the court list of precedence behind her husband.
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Communist Forces Repelled At Night
Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea — (U.P.) Communist troops attacked the Allied lines south of the Pamunjom truce negotiation area until day but were beaten off after a 30-minute battle at closer range.
An enemy platoon, armed with hand grenades and small arms, attacked a hill held by UN forces early this morning.
Allied artillery was called into action and the enemy withdrew shortly.
Allied fighter-bomber planes,
"making every bomb count," destroyed a 250-foot steel and concrete bridge in North Central Korea, damaged two other bridges and cut railroad tracks at 120 places. Other planes attacked 1.158 enemy supply vehicles during the night and destroyed 112.
18 Men From C-47 Parachute In Storm
Sydney, N. S. — (U.P.) — Eighteen men parachuted from a U.S. Air Force C-47 transport in a snowstorm Wednesday night and a passenger said today their biggest worry was "how it would be."
It turged out just fine, Capt. Robert J Hessler of (33-15 81st St. Jackson Heights), New York, told a reporter as he and the others from the gasoline-short plane rested in a Sydney hotel. All 18 were picked up by police and none was hurt.
The abandoned plane, enroute from Westover Field, Mass., to St. John's Nfld., crashed in heavily-wooded country outside the Sydney city limits. The pilot ordered all
aboard to bail out when he tried to land at Sydney to pick up gasoline but could not find the airport through the blinding snow.
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Pogo Joins Staff Of Kansan; Opossum's Lair On Page Two
We're playing host to a visitor today—he's a new man on the campus and we hope that you'll be friends. His name is Pogo.
Pogo is a 'possum who, with his animal associates, have taken up residence in a swamp in the deep south. Pogo and his friends call themselves "nature's screechers."
Some of his friends are Albert the Alligator, a raffish street-corner
type; Dr. Howland Owl, a big-time scientist; Churchy La Femme, a happy-go-lucky turtle; beAuregard the Houn' Dog, an amateur criminologist; and Porkypine, a sourpuss philosopher.
There is also a cute little French dish, called Mam'selle Hepzibah (a skunk).
If you want to meet these nice people see page 2.
49th Year, No.100
Daily Kansan
Special Election To Decide ASC Redistricting Question
Members of the KuKu's, Jay Janes, Red Peppers, and Frosthawks, campus pep clubs, will be present to help send the team off.
A pep rally to send the basketball team to Oklahoma game will be held at 10:30 p.m. today at the Santa Fe Railroad station.
6 Engineers Win Scholarships
"All students are urged to attend the rally," Don Horttor, KuKu club president said, "since this will be a good opportunity to show Phog Allen and the team we are really behind them."
A special all-student election has been called for Wednesday, March 19, to determine if students are in favor of reorganizing the All Student Council.
The scholarships are worth $500 each. They are provided by the Morse foundation, which until recently supported scholarships in the Chicago area only.
The three who received the scholarships last year are James Robert Ashley, Flagstaff, Ariz.; Jack Walter Long, Lawrence, and Charles William Stephens, Kansas City, Mo., all engineering seniors.
The new scholars are Leonard N. Urban, Sunflower; William Keith Hartell, Plattsburg, Mo., and Donald Louis Creighton, Colby, all engineering juniors.
Edith Nichols, fine arts sophomore, will play the oboe and Leo Horacek, graduate student, the trumpet, for solo parts in "Quiet City."
Raymond Cerf, professor of violin,
will play a solo and Eugene Johnson,
fine arts junior, and Jacqueline
holmes, jazz guitarist, solos,
souls for the Bach composition.
The program includes "Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 in G Major" by Bach; "Symphony No. 104 in D Major" by Haydn; "Quiet City" by Copland, and "Classical Symphony, Opus 25" by Prokofeff.
The Little Symphony orchestra will give a concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 4, in Strong auditorium.
The orchestra is directed by Dean Thomas B. Gorton of the School of Fine Arts. It is a chamber music institution and advanced students.
"The Lady's Not For Burning," the University's third major play which opened on Wednesday will be given at 8 noon the theater and Saturday in Fraser theater.
On the ballot will be reorganization amendments to the present ASC constitution. They passed the ASC special meeting last by a unanimous vote.
Three new John Morse Memorial scholarships in electrical and mechanical engineering, and the renewal of three such scholarships awarded last year, has been announced by Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the school of engineering and architecture.
Pep Rally To Give Jayhawkers Sendoff
Comedy To Be Given Today and Saturday
Little Symphony To Give Concert
The English comedy, written by Christopher Fry and directed by Tom Rea, instructor of speech, has scored a hit in its first two presentations.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, Feb. 29, 1952
Matt' Murray Will Receive Proceeds From Benefit Dance
Murray served in the Philippine islands during World War II. He is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha, social fraternity.
A benefit dance, with all proceeds going to Madison "Matt" Murray, college sophomore who was critically injured in an automobile accident Saturday, Feb. 23, will be held in the Military Science building following the Kansas-Kansas State basketball game Friday, March 7.
Plans for the benefit dance are being made by a committee of Jay Janes and KuKu's. Tickets will go on sale next week and may be purchased from any Jay Jane or KuKu.
when his mother became ill in Charlottesville, Va.
Two campus bands have volunteered their services to play at the dance. Final arrangements will be made. The band which will meet at 5 p.m. today.
"Boft the Jay Janes and the KuKu's hope to enlist the aid of everyone in the University, faculty and students alike, in our plan to help Mat." Donald Hortor, president of the KuKu Club said. "We think he is deserving of any aid we can give him."
Plans for the benefit dance are being made by the KuKu and Jay Janes pep clubs. Both organizations voted unanimously to sponsor the campaign. Murray is a member of the All-Student Council and the KuKu club. Murray was well known on the campus for his song stylings.
He has remained unconscious since the accident. He was moved Thursday evening to the KU Medical Center in Kansas City for probable surgery following an examination by a neuro-surgeon.
Michelangelo Story To Be Shown Tonight
Since his father died last spring, Murray has had the responsibility of supporting his mother and younger brothers and sisters. Although carrying a 15-hour load in school, he was working full time.
"The Titan," the story of Michelangelo, will be the film series presentation in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 p.m. today. Admission is free.
The picture is a Robert Flaherty presentation and is narrated by Fredric March, Hollywood actor.
Last year he was on the honor roll, but he was forced to drop out of school in the fall semester of this year because of financial difficulty
They have only to be accepted by a majority of student voters in the election before becoming part of the ASC constitution.
The biggest change which the proposed amendments would make if
"This year's exposition is scheduled two weeks before the Kansas Interscholastic track meet and the Kansas Relays, to be held during the spring vacation. In past years, the two events occurred on the same weekend," said Vernon K. Johnson, engineering senior, who is general chairman.
The University of Kansas annual Engineering Exposition sponsored by the School of Engineering and Architecture will be held April 4 and 5.
Engineer Show To Feature Twenty Exhibits
The exposition will feature 20 exhibits, representing the work of 22 departments. The State Geological survey, Research foundation, and departments of Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC will also be represented.
The vital problem of civil defense will be demonstrated by the engineering physics department with a display on defense against radiological and biological warfare.
accepted would be to change student representation from a school basis to one of residential districts. In effect, this would mean that a student now represented by a member of a certain school would be represented by a person living in the same type of residence.
If accepted, the amendments would change sections of article V of the ASC constitution. The proposed amendments would have representatives elected by proportional representation from the membership of these eight district residence groups.
1. Social fraternities, 2. social sororities, 3. men's University houses, 4. women's University houses, 5. independent cooperatives houses, 6. professional fraternities maintaining houses, 7. unaffiliated students and 8. freshman women dormitories.
Other new features in the proposed amendments are:
Political candidates would be chosen by means of a closed party primary which only members of the district solved would have the right to vote.
Any student not affiliated with a political party would be able to have his name on the general election ballot by petition.
All representatives would be elected at a general all-school electio-
hive. The university students would have the right to vote on candidates from every district.
Representatives of the district for freshman women dormitories would be chosen at a special election each fall to serve for one year. Only members of that district would be allowed to vote.
Vacancies would be declared for the position of any representative absent for three consecutive meetings without a valid excuse.
In another action, the Council recommended that the Big Seven Student Government conference for the University be held at the University this spring.
If You Have Bad Luck Today Register Gripes With Caesar
Feb. 29, as everyone knows, comes but once every four years. If misfortune should come your way today through an exam, a bill to be paid, or a slight fracture, you can blame it on Julius Caesar.
All this confusion of an extra day started in the year 46 B. C. With all his other troubles, Caesar had to worry about the vernal equinox. He
Allen Picks His All-American Team
"Phog" Allen, who's been sorting basketball talent for 42 years, named his 1552 All-American team here. He'll have some extra spots with Big Seven performers.
The venerable wizard of Mt. Oread, who marked his all-conference ballot with his own quintet of regulars in 1936 and 1943—both teams were unbeaten in league play
"I'll take that team and play anybody else's top five," the doctor said. "Let 'em try to match it. If you want figures, these boys are averaging more than 10 points per game apiece. The team scoring average is 95.2."
—handed down this list for the sectional backers to shoot at: Bob Kenney, Kansas, and Dick Knostman, Kansas State, at forwards; Clyde Lovellette, Kansas, center; Bill Stauffer, Missouri, and Jim Buchanan, Nebraska, at the guard spots.
"In my memory, there never been five boys as good in this league at
any one time in the past," he said.
Allen, with an eye always cocked to the side-stages of the game, then praised his choices beyond their native ability.
“Take these boys, Knostman and Stauffer,” he said. “Their character is the direct result of fine upbringing at home.” I know their parents well. They have guided these boys almost flawlessly.
knew it was coming two months later than it should.
"Kenney and Lovellette have received a great deal of inspiration from their mothers. Bob's father died when he was only two. He was a great athlete. His mother has brought this boy along his dad's footsteps."
"What a competitor Stauffer is. He's as rugged as they come but clean all the way and an outstanding example of good sportsmanship. On a team like this you could just tell him to go up and get it."
"Clyde's mother is responsible for heading off what could have been a
"What a team," the doctor museu. He finally had run down. He zipped the neck of his practice uniform. He was due at basketball practice. He wants his league-leaders ready for Oklahoma Saturday night at Norman.
great personality handicap. In junior high, when it appeared he might become sensitive because of his height, she prescribed rope-skipping 1,000 times a day. Through this he gained balance and agility. He is 6 feet, 9 inches and weighs around 240. But have you ever seen a more graceful hooker or a more deft touch? It's no fluke he's leading the nation in scoring.
"Buchanan is playing with a young, inexperienced team. But he's been a standout for three years. He plays just as hard when the game obviously is lost as he does in the clutch. If there's any play he can't make in basketball from a guard spot, I don't know what it is."
To solve the problem he asked Sosigenes, a Greek astronomer, to come to Rome and set the calendar in order. Sosigenes thought the best possible answer would be to add two months between November and December. This gave the calendar 14 months. Ever since then, because of the great work of Sosigenes, 46 B. C. has been known in history as the year of confusion.
Julius finally got his equinox straightened out, and you would think that would have been enough for any man. That is, any man except Caesar. After some rapid calculation he found he now had $365\frac{1}{4}$ days in every year. Always a man for details, Julius decided this would never do.
So he reduced poor February to a mere 28 days. To make up for the extra one-fourth day every year, he added one day to February every four years.
Things were not as simple in his day as they are today. So, in order to confuse everyone he decided to insert a day between the 23rd and 24th. In time people tired of two 23d's of February and tacked the day onto the end of the month.
It wasn't until 1582 and Pope Gregory XIII that things really got straightened out. That is, if you consider today's calendar as being straightened out. There still are 16 weeks to a semester and even Julius couldn't fix that.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 29, 1952
Editorials
Daily Kansan Will Start Featuring Popular Cartoon Series Monday
Beginning Monday the Daily Kansan will present the comic strip "Pogo" as a regular feature of the editorial page. We think this is one of the better strips available today, and we're pretty happy that we were able to get it.
Walt Kelly, the man who draws Pogo, is an ex-Walt Disney cartoonist whom Disney showed many tricks... one of which was the art of saunting through the studio gate when he had taken two hours for lunch.
- Kelly went to work for Disney in 1937—he knows that was the year because he still uses a 1937 calendar he lifted from Disney's studio—after spending the preceding 24 years getting through grammar and high school, and working at various odd jobs. His greatest distinction in high school was his ability to take apart a ukelele blindfolded.
Kelly worked as a reporter on the Bridgeport Front Page Flash for a few years, but left the paper shortly after a series of political cartoons he drew resulted in the election of the perennial Socialist candidate for mayor.
After he left the newspaper business Kelly worked as an inspector in the Department of Public Welfare, investigator, and clerk in an art store. He soon tired of this, however, and headed for California and Disney.
When Kelly tired of his work at the Disney studio he went to New York, and through Walt Disney he got an offer from a book printing firm to draw comic books.
Kelly was horrified at the blood-curdling stuff he found in most comic books, and decided he had better stick to juvenile work instead of the heavy adventure.
"It was impossible for me to draw a naked woman," he explains. "It was blinding work. I would no sooner have her clothes off than I would remove
my hat, out of respect. With my eyes unshaded I couldn't see what I was doing."
So Kelly's early strips featured puppies, kittens, mice, and elves.
In 1942 he conceived the idea of a strip built around the Southern swamplands. It featured a little Negro boy named Bumbazine. The side characters were rabbits, mice, squirrels, lunches, catfish, hollow logs, birds, turtles, an alligator, and a 'possum.
However, Kelly got rid of Bumbazine and chose a little 'possum called Pogo, who had been a minor character. In 1948 Kelly was signed by the Post-Hall syndicate. Since then the strip has become one of the most popular in the entire country.
You will meet some strange characters in Pogo. Of course, there is Pogo, himself, the warm-hearted little guy we all would like to think we are. Then there is Albert the Alligator, who is closer to what we think the other fellow is—full of knowledge and gusto that backfires.
Porky the Porcupine is a pessimistic realist. He sees the sour side, but underneath he has a heart of gold. Churchy LaFemme, the Turtle, is a reformed pirate captain who is having a lot of fun out of life.
Howland Owl is a pseudo-scientist—convinced he knows everything—who plunges into everything with the confidence of ignorance. Beauregard Bugleboy, a dog, is the sort of hound that always seem proud to be a canine.
They're all good-hearted characters who are always good for a laugh. We think you will enjoy them.
So, commencin' Mondayaddy we gone have that bunch 'o l'il human beans runnin' aroun' this here headytilial page. You be watchin'.
—J.W.Z.
Tightens Drinking Rules
The Interfraternity Council at Valparaiso, (Ind.), has tightened its drinking rules, to "cover any problems which might arise."
The rules prohibit the serving of any alcoholic beverages, "either directly or indirectly," at any mixed fraternity function. Punishments for violations can go as high as a $500 fine.
Commented the Valparaiso Torch:
At present there is no problem of alcohol on campus; there never has been and we hope there never will be." However, the school's enrollment has risen, and "Increase in size means increase in regulations."
Meet POGO
Mike tewol
short ones
YOU'LL BE SEEING HIM in the new lovable, laughable comic strip by Walt Kelly, beginning
The problem of the little red school houses disappearing has caused some persons to wonder if a similar plan couldn't be worked out to get rid of the big Red school teachers.
MONDAY IN THE Daily Kansan
Here's one person who must be looking for the good things in life. He thinks putting a wad of gum on the under side of a restaurant table is at least preferable to carving initials on the top side.
We wonder if there was anyone else besides us who took the defeated attitude after they learned the KU-K. State game was to be televised. Here we had chosen Set 2 just to be able proudly to announce "we actually saw that game." And now the whole nation can merely turn a switch and see the game. At least we'll get the college spirit standing in line for hours and then the fighting scramble for a seat. Life really is wonderful.
If the government should set up an investigation bureau to examine the current inflammable sweaters, we know one news-paperman who is ready to help as soon as possible. He expects, however, to find the same thing in sweaters as has been there for years.
Harry Truman has caused great comment on whether or not he will seek the re-election for the presidency. But we follow along with those who believe he didn't have the White House redecorated for a GOP tenant.
Our mind has been put at ease now that we know Junior in the Dick Tracy comic strip knows that Model still loves him. We will never understand, however, why he didn't board the near-empty bus Model streaked away in.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $450 a year (add $1 a semester in lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of March 3, 1879.
FOR THE BENEFIT OF THOSE OF YOU WHO HAVEN'T BEEN PAVIN' ATTENTION, HERE'S THE STORY UP TIL NOW.
THIS GONE TAKE A LIL' TIME --- SO I BRUNG A SAN' WITCH -- SIT DOWN.
NOW FIRST OF ALL! --- MMMPH --- THERE WUMB A BOBBLE MOOMP!
SO-GOBF - WHEN WOBBER AN BOOGO MUMF AROOMMPH SCMBLSH!
THEN---MLFGOB GLF - HAW WOBS GOODLOP - HUG ROTKSPLK.
WELL, THAT'S ABOUT ALL! --- MY SAKES, HERE IS THE END OF THE STRIP, ALREADY--- GOODY!
WALT KELLY
FOR THE BENEFIT OF THOSE OF YOU WHO HAVEN't BEEN PAWN ATTENTION, HERE'S THE STORY UP TIL NOW.
THIS GONE TAKE A WHILE, SO I BRUING A SAN WITCH ---SIT DOWN.
NOW FIRST OF ALL--- MAMPH --- THERE WUMS A BOBBLE MOOMP!
SO - GOBF - WHEN WOBBER AN' BOGGO MUMF AROOMMPH SCMBLSH!
THEN----MLFGOB GLF - HAW WOBS GOOLLOP - HUG ROTKSPLK.
WELL, THAT'S ABOUT ALL ---- MY SAKES, HERE'S THE END OF THE STRIP, ALREADY---- GOODY!
WOLF PULLET
Better Production, Less Ads, Might Help Improve Movies
"Movies are better than ever," current slogan of the motion picture industry, has received considerable criticism. Some popcorn-eating fans have taken the producers' word for it, but others are of the opinion that more would be gained if the industry spent more money actually improving the movies instead of trying to change public opinion through advertising.
The movie producers, however, largely can refute the claim of a "cultural lag" by pointing to a long list of outstanding films released during the past year. A quick backward glance brings to mind Teresa, Fourteen Hours, All About Eve, The Red Badge of Courage, Cyrano, A Place in the Sun, A Streetcar Named Desire, Decision Before Dawn, Death of a Salesman and African Queen.
A closer look reveals that several of these were originally plays on Broadway. Thus the industry points out that it is helping to spread the successful plays to the mass by means of film. Hollywood also emphasizes that the industry is doing things never before attempted, including more filming in original settings. Product claim also that viewpoints and situations previously shunned are now being forcefully and successfully produced.
Greater effort is being made to present social problems and things of cultural value than senseless comedy and cheesecake. This, unfortunately, is only a trend which has not spread to the entire industry.
While the motion pictures seemingly are overcoming part of their "cultural lag," the current Broadway season has been in for its share of criticism—only on Broadway the theater goers are showing their dissatisfaction by staying away. Only a few musicals and plays have been successful this season, and these only moderately.
Revivals of the classics and former hits have enjoyed the most success this season. Music in the Air, a new production of the Jerome Kern-Oscar Hammerstein musical of 1932, and Pal Joey, a new version of Rodgers-Hart-O'Hara musical are the most popular. Guys and Dolls and Call Me Madam are doing well, along with South Pacific, which has still a different cast, and Top Banana, a new musical starring Phil Silvers.
According to the Saturday Review of Literature, Top Banana brings back, as Peep Show didn't succeed in doing, the "rich and gusty flavor" of burlesque in its heyday.
Don Juan In Hell has been a surprisingly great success, while several "sure-fire hits" have failed miserably. Faithfully Yours, with Ann Sothern and Robert Cummings, was a comedy adaptation of Jean Bernard Luc's play, The Philemon Complex. It received a cold reception, with many saying it had too much of Hollywood, lacking only the sale of popecorn in the lobby.
Heading the moderately successful productions is Constant Wife, starring Katharine Cornell and Brian Aherne. But it too is a revival. *
Broadway's current season has been depressing, but the successes seem to run in cycles, with producers hoping for a new crop next season. —Charles L. Burch.
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I'M A BOLL, WEEEVIL-AN' SMART AS A WHIP.
OH,
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Brown, 1936. N. Y. Penguin Corp.
Page 3
OF ALL-THAT WAS A DOOMP!
University Daily Kansan
OF ALL--
TH--
TMS A
OOMP!
Walt
Polly!
WALT PULLEY
ds, lies
tion pic-
popcorn-
arners
ent more
o change
claim of
films re-
writes to
badge of
I desire,
Queen.
Holly plays
helping to
Holy-
r before
eidosus
nised are
ums and
tesecake.
l to the
of their
for its
showing
alts and
derately.
the most
of the
Joey, a
popular.
giving
nana, a
Banana ich and
s, while Yours,
caption rec. Hollywood,
constant too is
ne suc-
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urch.
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The Student Engineering council has appointed Ronald Wigton, engineering junior, to succeed Robert Kipp, engineering senior, as editor of the Kansas Engineer, for the spring issue of the quarterly magazine.
Wigington To Edit Kansas Engineer
The Kansas Engineer is the official student publication of the School of Engineering.
The council also appointed Gene Rogers, sophomore, associate editor; Clark Anderson, junior, business manager; Richard Boggs, freshman, advertising manager, and Michel Wells, freshman, circulation manager, all of the School of Engineering.
There are still some openings on the staff and anyone interested should contact a staff member, Wigington said.
Official Bulletin
Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, 4 p.m. Tuesday, Pine room, Union. Non-members welcome.
English proficiency examination,
March 8. Juniors or seniors in the
College, Education, Journalism,
Medicine and Fine Arts will register
March 3, 4, 5 in the office of their
deans. Mrs. Calderwood will be in
211 Fraser, 9-12 and 2-4 on Tuesday,
March 4; and 9-12 on Thursday,
March 6. to answer questions.
Jewish service, Hillel foundation,
6:45 tonight. Danforth chapel.
Faculty forum, noon Monday, Faculty club. "Are Our Moral and Ethical Standards Changing?"
Applications for editor and business manager for K-Book and K-Calendar, and the Student Directory must be filed in writing by March 1, with Bill Stinson, dean of men's office. Stinson has details.
Mathematical Colloquium, 5 p.m. today, 203 Strong. Dr. Earl A. Coddington, M. I. T.
Friday. Feb. 29. 1952
No firing for Women's Rifle club todav.
Lutheran Student association joint meeting at Manhattan Sunday. Meet on church 3:15 p.m. Call reservation Carol Miller, 2882R, after 4:30 p.m.
International Relations *club dinner.* 6 p.m. Tuesday, The Hearth. 9 a.m. Brown speaker. Call reservations to betty Barton, 415, by day.noon.
Tau Sigma recital, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Fraser theater. Tickets, Women's P.E. office, Robinson.
New Stamp For Celebration
Washington—(U.P.)-The post office department has approved a special stamp to be issued in connection with the Grand Coulee irrigation project celebration next May.
And Howland Owl
JIM HUNTEN
Meet POGO And Howland Owl
THEY'LL BOTH be in the new comic strip by WALT KELLY to tickle your funny bone-beginning
MONDAY IN THE Daily Kansan
To Hold Tryouts For Play
Tryouts for Shakespeare's Twelfth Night" the fourth and last University Players production of the year will be held Monday from 3 to 5 and 7 to 8 p.m., and Tuesday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in the Little Theater of Green hall. Students unable to tryout at these times, should contact Mrs. Frances Feist, instructor of speech.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 4
Friday. Feb. 29, 1952
Rugged Oklahoma To Face Kansas
The Kansas Jayhawkers move into the home stretch of the basketball season Saturday night at Norman against Oklahoma's tricky Sooners. ◊
A series of events which happened in rapid-fire order give the team from Norman definite psychological and physical advantages.
Besides the pressure of the possible conference crown. Phog Allen's Kansans are deep in illness and thin in reserves.
With Kansas State defeated a week ago by Colorado and the Kansas Monday night win over Missouri, KU rests in the responsible position of Big Seven conference leader.
Bob Kenney—the Jayhawkers' number two man in scoring—is still ailing with a case of streptococcus throat, freshman star Larry Davenport has the hives, and 6 foot 5 inch Bill Lienhard still is not completely recovered from a recent influenza attack.
Coach Allen will have to pull all stops to get by the potent Red-shirts.
Faced with a tight zone defense, the Jayhawker shooting will almost certainly have to be of the long range type, and Kenney could have provided much of the outer-rim scoring punch.
In the last six tries on the Oklahoma boards, Kansas has come out with two wins.
The Sooners also have the distinction of being the team able to hold All-American Clyde Lovellette to his collegiate low of nine points. Slowing Lovellette to a walk, they
Jayhawk Swimmers Meet Iowa-State
Walt Mikols' Kansas university swimmers will meet Iowa State in a dual meet in Robinson gym pool at 4 p.m. this afternoon. The Cyclone swimmers will be gunning for their 22nd straight win over Big Seven conference foes. Kansas has won three and lost six dual meets.
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put Kansas into a triple-tie for the conference crown with a 52-49 stunner two years ago.
Meet POGO and his turtle pal ChurchyLaFemme
Last year, the Jayhawkers won their second victory in the fieldhouse. Lovellette scored 26 points over the towering efforts of Marcus Freiberger and Doug Lynn to aid the Kansas 58-52 victory.
45
They'll both be romping through the new comic strip by Walt Kelly-averaged 12.3 points per game in four previous tilts against Oklahoma.
Despite a 7-15, won-lost record this season, the Sooners are still strong at home. They led Kansas State by 10 points in the fourth quarter last month before dropping a 65-54 decision. In their latest home outing, they clipped Oklahoma A&M 65-60 in a triple overtime.
*K-State's countercharge involving Nebraska's infringement of the tryout ruling is next in importance, according to Dean T. DeWitt Carr, faculty representative from the University.
Code Violations To Be Discussed
MONDAY IN THE Daily Kansan
In Lienhard, Allen's replacement choice for Kenney, the Jayhawkers have a player who enjoys unusual success against the Sooners. He has
Nebraska's charge that Kansas State violated the recruiting and tryout laws of the Big Seven will be top item on the agenda today at the conference's faculty representatives' meeting in Kansas City.
Officials at Nebraska maintain that the athletic department of Kansas State recruited and gave tryouts to two Nebraska high school
Besides Lienhard, Allen will send ball-hawk John Keller in at the other forward slot. Lovelette will be at center. Dean Kelley and Bill Hougland will hold down the guard positions.
Strict Diet Prescribed For Kansas Track Ace
"Soup for Lunch," is one of the requirements Herb Semper, KU's ace two-miler must meet to stay in trim for his distance races.
By DON NIELSEN
Keeping a strict diet is one of the most important conditions imposed on a track man, Herb says, and a light lunch, usually a bowl of soup and a few crackers, is just one of the things that keeps him in shape.
Bill Easton, head track coach, is very concerned with his track men's weight. Accurate charts of the men's weight are kept from day to day, and their racing times are compared to those found at which he makes his best time, he tries to stay within a few pounds of it.
But eating regularly and in specified amounts is by no means the only
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Each day, the distance men run
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and finish up with a round or two
of calisthenics.
Herb was born in Forest Park, Ill. and started school here in the spring of 1948. He married a home town girl, Shirley Evans, in Melrose Park, Ill., in August 1950.
Right now, Herb is in the middle of preparations for the Big Seven indoor meet scheduled for Kansas City's municipal auditorium Friday and Saturday. The preliminaries will be held Friday night with the finals in most events to come up Saturday afternoon.
Another event which Herb will try for is the Olympic tryouts in Los Angeles June 28. The first three in each event will be chosen for the Olympics.
UNION CAB
PHONE
2800 65
Kicked in the Face by a Bootee
OR
Who Ever Called It a "Blessed Event"?
Once there was a Sophomore who had a Sister. He also had a Girl. Both these filles had the Baptismal Handicap of Maggy. Small World.
The sister (call her Maggy I for the record) got married. In due process, she produced an Offspring. So, fraternal-like, our Sapient Sophomore wrote her a letter of Congratulations, starting "I hear you have a Baby"—Trouble was, he forgot to mail it right away and went on vacation and left the letter on his Desk.
students, in violation of the Big Seven code.
His roommate spotted it and being a Soul of Honor, he didn't read the Blast. Just saw "Dear Maggy". So he addressed an envelope to Maggy II at Nortamp, slapped on a stamp and dropped the Epistle in the box.
This Sophomore still has a sister named Maggy. No Girl. He still has no Idea why.
Had he been Wise —he'd have sent his Sister and her Mate a beautiful decorated "Congratulations" Telegram, Telegrams get the right to destination . . . carry Good News, Invitations, Bids for Cash and Dates more resultfully than any other Form of communication. When you have a message to send that means Something to Someone —just call Western Union . . or sprint to your Western Union office.
Dean Carr said that revisions of the recruiting law will also be discussed.
"The faculty representatives'
meetings are a rigorous grind." Dean Carr said. "We are generally in session fourteen hours a day." The two-day meetings are held three times a year.
1947
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University Daily Kansan
"grind,"
generally
a day,
e held
Page 5
Jayhawkers Picked To Win In Big Seven Indoor Meet
The latest guesses on the winner of the Big Seven indoor track meet at Kansas City tonight and Saturday definitely favor Coach Bill Easton's Jayhawkers.
Herb Semper, Wes Santee, and Bob DeVinney are expected to give Kansas the needed points to lift the Kansas squad past a strong team of Oklahoma Sooners. The team from Norman could upset the Jayhawkers as several other conference teams.
The Kansas State Wildcats will likely present a double winner in spinner Thane Baker, and if he comes through as expected, the
Wildcats could fit into the third place notch.
Missouri is picked for the fourth spot, and the Nebraska huskers are selected to fill the fifth position. Any of these three could easily be shuffled although none is expected to beat either Kansas or Oklahoma.
---
BILL EASTON
Cat Frosh Rout Kansas
BOB DeVINNEY
Kansas is expected to win points in the track events from the 880-yard run through the two-mile, with Herb Semper and Wes Sante take-
M. BONDY
What was a close game between the Kansas and Kansas State "B" teams in an earlier game in Law-
Totals 14 9 38
Kansas State (65) G FT F
McGhee 0 5 1
Newcomer 0 0 1
Tangeman 1 1 2
Smith 1 4 3
Adams 2 0 1
Bergen 2 3 2
Fisher 1 0 0
Nelson 1 0 4
Hunter 1 1 2
Wleener 1 1 2
Golf 1 1 2
Craft 7 7 2
Childs 1 4 1
Box Score
Kansas “B” (37) G FT F
Dye 4 1 2
Alberts 0 2 3
Franklin 0 0 0
Smith 0 2 3
Wolfe 0 0 0
Guess 1 0 1
Whitney 0 1 3
Nicholson 1 2 3
Foto poules 1 0 0
Kelley 4 4 5
Anderson 0 0 3
Buller 1 0 4
Johnson 1 0 4
Squires 1 0 2
Bogue 0 0 2
Padgett 0 0 1
Forsyth 1 1 1
Fanestil 0 0 1
Totals 19-27 24
Score at half: 27-21. K-State
EISENHOWER
You will want to read Gunther on our famous Kansan!
BY JOHN GUNTHER
Keeler's
Oklahoma and Kansas are accorded the largest single event totals with nine points in the quarter and two-mile.
Keeler's bookstore
ing the crowns in the two-mile and the mile.
939 Mass.
rence, developed into a 65-37 rout for the Wildcats in Manhattan Thursday.
B'
Kansas has gone undefeated through dual meets with Kansas State, Nebraska and Missouri, while OU has won over North Texas State and Nebraska. They also set a new mile relay record at the Michigan State indoor relays.
The junior Jayhawks enjoyed a temporary 15-11 lead at the close of the first quarter. Kansas State tied the game 15-15 early in the second period and pulled away steadily to win the game. The last half was strictly no contest as the Wildcats opened the jets and roared out of sight.
Roger Craft, 6-5 Garden City freshman, poured through 21 points to pace the pack. He was playing in place of Jerry Jung, 6-11 freshman center, who is in the hospital after an appendicitis attack. Craft also did a great job of rebounding. He cleared the boards 12 times.
Everett Dye and Allen Kelly paced the Kansas attack with nine points each.
A
Meet POGO And Porkypine
THEY'LL BOTH be in the heart-warming new comic strip by Walt Kelly
MONDAY IN THE Daily Kansan
Lovellette Tops Nation's Scorers
Clyde Lovellette, for the 10th time in 11 weeks, leads the nation's scorers with a 26.2 points per game average.
Less than a point in the averages away is Louisiana State's Bobby Pettit. The LSU sophomore has a 25.5 average.
Friday, Feb. 29, 1952
Chuck Darling of Iowa has 25,2.
Dick Groat of Duke, 25.1, Mark
Workman of West Virginia, 24,8,
and Frank Selvy of Furman with 24.5
follow the two leaders. After that
no one else has a chance.
If Lovelle falters in Kansas' home stretch race, any one of the four southern players could come through. Among the easterners, Larry Hennessey of Villanueva barely makes the top 10. He has a 21.5 average.
Bob Kenney of Kansas leads in the free throwing department. Gerald Rogers of Texas Western has
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taken over the field goal lead with a 51.4 mark. Clarence Hannon of Army tops in rebounds and Groat best in assists.
The ten leading scorers:
Lovellette, Kansas 26.2
Pettit, L. S. U. 25.5
Darling, Iowa 25.2
Groat, Duke 25.1
Workman, W. Virginia 24.8
Selvy, Furman 24.5
Retherford, B-Wall. 23.1
Hemric, Wake Forest 21.9
Handian, Wash. & Lee. 21.5
Hennessey, Villanova 21.5
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17
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 29, 1952
Weekend Social Events
Gamma Phi Exchange Dinner
Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Phi
Delta Theta fraternity held an exch
change dinner Thursday. The chap-
terones were Mrs. Ralph Park and
Mrs. J. H. Kreamer.
Alpha Chi Pledge-Class Party
The Alpha Chi Omega sorority
pledge class will have a party from
8 to 11 p.m. Friday at the chapter
house. The chaperones will be Mrs.
Violet Whitmore, Mrs. Hazel Jenkins
and Mrs. Arthur Little.
Battenfield Hall Party Tonight
Battenfeld hall will have a party from 8 p.m. to midnight Friday at the hall. The chaperones will be Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Mrs. Althea B. Galloway and Mrs. Edna E. Ramage.
AE Pi Installation Of Officers Alpha Epsilon Pi will have installation of officers from 7:30 p.m. to
midnight Saturday in the Big Seven room of the Eldridge hotel. The chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Vallenstein, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ingrisano Mr. and Mrs. Herman Cohen.
Two Fraternities To Entertain
Alpha Phi Alpha and Kappa Alpha Psi fraternities will have a party from 9 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. Saturday at the Alpha Phi Alpha chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. Alberta Frye, Mrs. Flavious Spencer and Mrs. Carl White.
AO Pi Party Tonight
Alpha Omicron Pi sorority will have a party from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the chapter house. The chaperones will be Mrs. D. I. Denham, housemother; Mrs. Eda n M. Stewart, Mrs. Frank M. Baird and Miss Julia Willard.
The two students attended the camp's August session, which consisted of four weeks' leadership training.
Mrs. Grace Ketterman, former student, reviewed "Behind the Ranges," a missionary biography with an Inland China setting, at the IVCF meeting Thursday in Danforth chapel.
the Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship Wednesday,
Students who attended this meeting donated money that would have been spent on a noon meal to the group's mission fund. This fund is used for student mission work in foreign universities.
Canterbury Club To Hold Special Lenten Service
A special Lenten service with Holy Communion and the imposition of ashes was held by the Canterbury club Wednesday in Danforth chapel.
Religious Notes
There will be a service at 7 a.m. every morning Monday through Friday in Danforth for the remainder of the Lenten season, Nick Agnos, Canterbury president said.
Ferre To Speak Sunday For Disciple Fellowship
The program for Sunday after Holy Communion will continue the long range plan of study that has occupied the group for the past several meetings. The fourth section of the doctrine of the church will be discussed and breakfast served after the meeting in the church rectory.
The Rev. Gus Ferre, university pastor for the Baptist church, will speak on "God's Will" at the KU Disciple fellowship at 5.30 p.m. Sunday at Barlow chapel, Myers hall.
The Baptist Student group will be the guests of KUDF for the meeting. Kenneth Long, education sophomore, will have the devotions. After the speech by the Rev. Ferre, supper will be served upstairs.
Wesley Foundation To Hear Talk On UMT Sunday
Kathryn Watkins, fine arts sophomore, is in charge of the worship service. It will consist of the installation of new Wesley foundation cabinet members.
Phillip Mitchell, assistant professor of German, will speak on universal military training at the Wesley foundation meeting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the First Methodist church. 946 Vermont street.
SPRING IS ON THE WAY!
IVCF To Hear Students
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Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
SEE FOR YOURSELF
And don't stick any little ole telescope in your pocket. . . you won't need it when you head for the Granada to see two "crack" basketball teams settle a mighty big issue on Friday night, March 7th!
Ya' see . . . it's like this! We've been doin' a lot of "sweatin" . . . "gettin' ready, that is" to show some folks around Lawrence that
BIG SCREEN TV
40,320 SQ. IN. OR 20 FOOT ACROSS THE BEAM! CAN TURN 900 SEATS IN THIS THEATRE INTO
GAME-SIDE THRILLS
WHEN
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE OF OUR THEATRE AUDITORIUM
... Seats Are Now On Sale
MEETS
KANSAS STATE
At the GKANADA Box Office
All Seats 85c Incl. All Tax
Only Capacity Sold ● No Reserved Seats
AND IN ADDITION OUR REGULAR SCREEN PROGRAM Immediately Following the Game! First Showing in Lawrence—Color By Technicolor
"JUNGLE HEADHUNTERS"
Made in the Course of the Lewis
Collow Amazon Expedition
Granada PHONE 946
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Phone K.U.376
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Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals may be delivered at 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date.
25 words or less Additional words
Three days
75c
2c
TRANSPORTATION
AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange tours or individual literaries. Phonem Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. tt
Ask us about family rates, sky coach,
and round trip trips. All expense
passage for European tour. Book
passage now for European summer.
Call Miss Gleesman at First
National Bank for information and
reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30.
University Daily Kansan
TYPING: Experienced in reports term papers, theses, notes and stencil cutting. Prompt attention given. Phone 1952W, Mrs. Robert Lewis, 1915 Tenn. 6
BUSINESS SERVICE
TYPIST: References; prompt, accurate service and late model Royal typewriter. Convenient to KU Bring to 1724 Indiana or call Mrs. Blesner. 3011r. F
FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N.H. 75c hair trim. 3-6
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. Ellis, 838 La. Al. 41. upstairs, P275J, 838 La.
TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses,
prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs.
Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode
Island. ¶
CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch,
dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries.
Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. tt
STUDYING later tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass.
RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment, high efficiency and efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tt
Page
CRYSTAL CAF' serves choice steaks, sandwiches, maitre, home-made pies and air-conditioned space for customers. All-conditioned, am, a.m. the midnight. Crystal Cafe. 690 Vt.
All Type Pens and Pencils Repaired QUICK SERVICE
Doctor
STUDENT Union Book Store
JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop for your business in the pet one-stop pet shop having fur, finn, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tt
PARKER S1 PEN and Pencil set in reel
Return to 1339 W. Campus or call 3510. 3
Return to 1339 W. Campus or call 3510. 3
LOST
THRIFT BOOK HOLDERS! We have received a new supply of Jayhawk ash trays. Stop in and get your free Rowlan book Store. 29
MISCELLANEOUS
EXPERIENCED FRO restyler and repair.
EXPERIENCED alterations. Phone
1116W, 945 Alabama.
**REAL ESTATE** listings wanted. Sales-
men. buyers. William J. V.
lmen. 3110R.
BOYS FOR EXTRA help in the dining
room, and evenings. Faculty clu-
k CU 457.
CARGILL, INC., specialists in serving agriculture—Mr. John Savage will be on the second day of the view team interested in a training program in this organization. Interested Business Presentation Bureau, 214 Strong, to sign the interview schedule.
HELP WANTED
WANTED: CLERK-TYPIST by reliable Lawrence firm. Vacation and overtime pay. State schooling and experience. Write P.O. Box 412, Lawrence, Kans. 4
HANDS FREE when writing or typing. A BOOK-EASE marks any reference section such as vocabulary, etc. See them at the Student Union Book Store. 3
FOR SALE
WRITER'S CRAMP? Rent a typewriter and type those notes, themes and compositions. Only $3.50 per month or $1.00 at your student Union Book Store.
3
SPECIAL RATES for students on Time, Life, and Fortune magazines. We take subscriptions to all magazines. P.S. You rebate too. Student Union Book Store.
LEARN LANGUAGE the easy way.
French, German, and Spanish verb
wheels solve all your difficulties. Student Union Book Store.
VIS-ED vocabulary cards in French, German, and Spanish will help you to an "A." See them today at your Student Union Book Store. 3
Comfort Convention!
JAYHAWKER
NEW Path Road CUSHIONED CHAIRS
NOW thru SAT.
George Montgomery
"INDIAN UPRISING"
EVERY INCH A LADY...
till you look at the record!
WARNER BROS'
"THIS WOMAN IS DANGEROUS"
PREVUE SATURDAY
11:15 p.m.
SUNDAY
STARRING JOAN DENNIS David
CRAWFORD MORGAN BRIAN
Late News Events Color Cartoon "The Oompahs"
Friday, Feb. 29.1952
Interstate Cooperation By Compact Adapts Itself To Current Needs
The oldest form of interstate co-operation, the compact, has just recently come into its own, Harriet M. Shedd, research assistant in the Bureau of Government Research states in the Feb. 15 issue of the publication Your Government.
Miss Shedd's report is entitle "Solving Interstate Problems by Compact." In her report Miss Shedd explains that although sanctioned in the Constitution, the little use of compacts, or formal agreements, from 1789 to 1925 mostly concerned settlement of boundary lines and penal jurisdiction among neighboring states.
Most compacts since 1900 are administrated by an appointed commission representing the participating states. The compact itself is usually prepared by a joint commission, appointed by the governors of the interested states that works on the advice or participation of federal officials.
Since then the use of compacts has broadened to include interstate education, water allocation, city administrative problems, flood control, resource development, forest fire protection, water pollution, and other matters involving two or more states, she explains.
FORD '51, 2-door, fully equipped. $8,000
Priced for immediate sale. Ph. 2351J 6
Once written, the compact is enacted by the state legislatures and put into force on approval by Congress.
WILSON SOUTHERN - CROSS tennis raquet. Light weight, gut-stretch, almost new. Fred Chen, McCook hall 4. 4.
Phone 3705.
VARSITY
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
Kansas, Colorado, and Nebraska are members of the Republican River compact of 1943 that concerns allocation of Republican river waters in order to obtain more efficient water utilization. In 1949, Kansas and Colorado signed a similar compact concerning Arkansas rive
masters. Miss Shedd wrote.
THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD
TONITE - SATURDAY
Rip-Roarig Drama
Of Oil-Mad Oklahoma
BKO presents
DOUBLE DEAL
with
MARIE WINDSOR
RICHARD DENNING
-Co-feature-
RED-HOT GUNS
SPIT
WHITE HOT LEAD
BADMAN'S
GOLD
Loot of
the Lawless!
warning Johnny Carpenter • Alyn Lockwood and Troy Tarrell
Ch. 3 "Iron Horse"
TONITE - SATURDAY
Rip-Roarig Drama
Of Oil-Mad Oklahoma
BKO
PRESENTS
DOUBLE
DEAL
with
MARIE
WINDSOR
RICHARD
DENNING
-Co-feature-
RED-HOT GUNS
SPIT
WHITE HOT LEAD
DOUBLE DEAL
JUN. - MON. - TUES.
ERROL FLYNN
OLIVIA de HAVILLAND
RAFAEL SABATINI'S
"Captain
Blood"
A WARNER BROS. RE-RELEASE
SUN. - MON. - TUES.
BASIL RATHBONE • GUY KIBBEE
HENRY STEPHENSON • ROBERT BARRAT
BADMAN'S GOLD
Loot of the Lawless!
Warning Johnny Carpenter - Alyn Lockwood and Troy Tarrell
Ch. 3 "Iron Horse"
-Co-feature-
LEON ERROL
JACK PAIR
The SPORTSMEN
LIBERACE
JERRY MURAD'S
HARMONICATS
FRANCHIE CARLE
SHEPHERD
and many others
A Music Director
highlights from BDA Film Films
FOOTLIGHT VARIETIES
John Hoover, chairman of the KU group, urged the members to attend the installation of officers in Kansas City, Mo., on March 5.
Engineers Appoint Exhibit Supervisor
The American Society of Toe Engineers appointed Gerald Tibb engineering junior, to supervise it exhibit at the forthcoming Engineering Exposition. Gene Brunson engineering sophomore, was appointed his associate.
NOW!
Ends Saturday
The Missouri-Kansas Boundary compact of 1949 designated a permanent boundary line between the states.
Travel Service
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL AGENCY
Tel. 30 8th & Mass.
TYRONE POWER ANN BLYTH MICHAEL RENNIE
THE MAN AND THE WOODMAN
A Great New Romantic Team!
Features Saturday: 1:00-3:10-5:04-7:14 and 9:24
Added: Musical - Color Cartoon - News
STARTS
SUNDAY
Prevue Saturday
11:15 p.m.
ILL NEVER FORGET YOU 20
Amazing! New!
Sensational!
And Technicolor, Too!
What a TECHNICOLOR lift you'll get out of MGM's new and amazing DANCING-ON-AIR musical!
FRED DANCES ON AIR!
Tapping, teetering on the rooftops of New York! The most sensational stunt you've ever seen!
More thrills!
"The Streetcar Shuffle"
"Skating in Central Park"
STARRING FRED ASTAIRE
☆ ☆ ☆
FRED ASTAIRE VERA-ELLEN·MARJORIE MAIN WITH KEENAN WYNN
7 new sona smashes available in the M-G-M Records Album Continuous Shows Sunday From 1 p.m. — Open 12:45 ALWAYS LATEST MOVIETONE NEWS
Granada
PHONE 946
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 29, 1952
-News Roundup
Tito Proposes Trieste Be Made Free Territory
Belgrade, Yugoslavia—(U.P.)—Mar-
shall Titon proposed today that both
Yugoslavia and Italy renounce their
claims to Trieste and convert it into
a jointly administered free terri-
tory.
He made the proposal in an interview with the official Yugoslav news agency Tanjug. It was in reply to Italian Premier Alcide De Gasperi's renewed claim at Lisbon to the entire territory of Trieste, long disputed between the two countries.
Tito said the agreement could be made an annex to the Italian peace treaty. Under it, he said, the governor of the territory should be alternately an Italian and a Yugoslav appointed for three-year terms. The vice governor under an Italian governor would be a Yugoslav, and vice versa.
Paris — (U.P.) – Premier Edgar Faure's five-weeks-old government resigned today, plunging France into an economic and political crisis which threatened Western Europe's rearmament program.
France Faces Crisis As Cabinet Resigns
Faure handed his government's resignation to President Vincent Auriol after his radical Socialist party failed to support him in a national assembly vote of confidence.
TV Freeze To End Sen. Johnson Says
Faure had asked the tax hike to meet the military commitments under the North Atlantic treaty and balance his record-high 1952 budget.
Denver— (U.P) -The nationwide freeze on new television stations set in 1948 will be lifted March 25, Sen. Ed. C. Johnson of Colorado said today.
The Senator, who announced the date after he held a conference with Paul Walker, the new federal communications commission chairman, in Washington said a 60 to 90-day hearing on Thursday. March 25 to permit interested parties to file applications or amend their old applications.
Southern Democrats Rally Around Russell
Washington — (U.P.) Southern Democrats rallied today around the presidential banner of Sen. Richard E. Russell and kept the door open for a possible withdrawal from the Democratic party.
In Washington, and in state capitals throughout the South, anti-Truman Democratic leaders enthusiastically pledged their support to the veteran Georgia senator who announced his candidacy Thursday.
Russell got 263 southern ballots for the 1948 Democratic nomination without announcing his candidacy.
Acheson Praised For Lisbon Efforts
Washington — (U.P.) — Democratic members of the House Foreign Affairs committee praised Secretary of State Dean Acheson today for giving a powerful shove to European at the recent Lisbon conference.
Atlantic pact countries agreed in principle at Lisbon to create a European army, paving the way for for enrolling German troops. They also agreed to include 50 divisions in various degrees of combat readiness.
Rep. John M. Vorys of Ohio, chief Republican spokesman on the Foreign Affairs committee, predicted Congress will continue to take a "show me" attitude toward European unity and self-help in defense preparations.
Irate Father Asks 'Just' Army Trial
Alloway, N.J.—U.P.)—An angry father vowed today he would get a just trial for his son, a wounded veteran of Heartbreak Ridge now
serving a 10-year prison term for sleeping on his guard post in the Korean front lines.
Dorsey McConnell said his 20- year-old son, Warren, had worked 72 hours without sleep before he was posted on all-night sentry duty.
McConnell said his son had given him Jus side of the story in a letter.
"We had been awake for three days prior to the time we got caught sleeping on guard," the letter said. "They kept us building bunkers during the daytime and pulling guard all night."
UN Refuses To Have Russia Police Truce
Pamnunjom, Korea—(U.P.)—T h e United Nations told the Communists "finally and irrevocably" today that they never will agree to let Russia police a Korean truce.
The near-ultimatum indicated the UN would keep fighting rather than accept Russia as one of six nations against brutal truce supervision commission.
To Talk On Silversmithing
A talk on "Silversmithing Techniques" will be given by Carlyle Smith, assistant professor of design, at the weekly faculty buffet supper at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the Faculty club. An exhibit of students' work will be shown.
Swimmers Show Rhythmic Grace
By MARY COOPER
In a demonstration of rhythmic grace, 35 women entertained the audience with 12 swimming and diving numbers, each representing a different country. The performers kept time to music appropriate to the particular scene.
A trip around the world was taken via the Quack club's annual water show last night in the swimming pool at Robinson gymnasium.
The opening number was performed in the dark with only bathing caps and hands painted with a luminous substance forming designs. The pattern is opened using set the pattern for the repainter of the hour-long show.
An exhibition of speed swimming and lightning turns was given by Tatjana Plume Walker, former Latvian swimming champion, as a guest performer.
Four members of the varsity divers also performed. Jerry Jester, education junior, clowned his way through a series of diving stunts and fancy dives were executed by Robert Wellborn, education senior, Alisha Chestnut, education human, and Archie Unruh, education senior.
Climax of the evening was the American flag formed in the water by the swimmers, a superb ending to a well organized, well rehearsed, and well performed "around the world" water spectacle.
Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education, is sponsor and trainer of the club.
Korean TruceWould Not End China Trouble, Expert Says
Even if a true agreement is signed in Korea, it will be only the beginning of trouble with the Chinese Communists for the United States, Albert Ravenholt, an associate of the Institute of Current World Affairs, said Thursday in an interview.
Mr. Ravenholt, who returned in December from a visit to Hong Kong, Formosa, Siam, and the Philippines, said there is a strong chance the Chinese Communists may become more nationalistic and "lean away" from Russia.
However, he explained, the Chinese Communists, independent of Russia, could pose a bigger problem to the United States than they do now. He said that American modern weapons would be relatively ineffective because of the lack of industrialization in China.
The position of the United States in the Far East is becoming more
difficult, Mr. Ravenholt said, and the American government is caught up in a crisis mentality that handicaps long range planning.
Mr. Ravenholt sees part of the solution to the problem in having the situation analyzed by private groups in the United States. These groups would include universities. He said the biggest problem is the problem in the rehabilitation of a country ravaged by war.
Although he believes the Korean war has resolved into a military stalemate, Mr. Ravenholt also believes that it has accomplished its main objectives of protecting the South Korean republic and defending Japan.
Mr. Ravenholt said that the Communists have convinced an estimated 95 per cent of the Chinese that the Korean war is a victory for them.
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Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
Church
CHRISTMAS TIME
Church Services
Students are cordially invited to participate in activities of all Lawrence churches. In addition to the regular order of service, there are many classes and functions planned especially for university groups.
First Methodist Church Vermont at 10th Oscar E. Allison, Minister Edwin F. Price Minister to Students
9:45 - Wesley Foundation Church School Class
10:50 - Morning Worship Sermon: "The Power of Commitment."
5:30 - Wesley Foundation Fellowship. Dr. Phillip Mitchell of the KU German Dept. will discuss "UMT."
Plymouth Congregational Church
925 Vermont St.
Dale E. Turner, Minister
SUNDAY SERVICES
9 a.m. and 11 a.m.- Identical Worship Services
6 p.m.- College Age Discussion Group
Trinity Episcopal Church
9 a.m. Holy Communion for Collegians Breakfast and Canterbury meeting follow in Rectory. Father Swift will lead discussion on "The Faith of the Church."
11 a.m. Holy Communion and sermon. Holy Communion daily in Danforth Chapel at 7 a.m.
MEMBER ASSOCIATION
CANTERBURY CLUBS